US Director of Health Economics Outcomes Research (Population Health)
About the role
What You'll Do
The US Director, Health Economics & Outcomes Research (HEOR) will serve as the strategic lead for US population health value demonstration for assigned BridgeBio therapies. This role is responsible for shaping and executing HEOR strategies that support access and utilization decisions across the product lifecycle. We have 2 field based roles based in the Central and East regions.
The Director will partner cross-functionally with Market Access, Medical Affairs, Commercial, Clinical Development and Statistics teams to ensure the generation and communication of robust, decision-relevant evidence for US payers, health systems, and other population health decision makers.
Responsibilities:
- Lead the development and strategic deployment of HEOR evidence, economic models and resources to support US payer and health system engagement, including training and partnership with Market Access, Field Medical, and Sales Leadership
- Gather IDN and payer insights around evidence requirements to ensure differentiation of BridgeBio therapies
- Provide strategic input into HEOR real world evidence, study design and execution to ensure relevance for US population health decision-making
- Lead development of AMCP Dossiers, Budget Impact Models and other economic tools to support the commercialization of BridgeBio therapies
- Lead external collaborations with KOLs and Centers of Excellence to drive evidence generation, publications, and credibility with payer and health system leadership
- Conduct HEOR advisory boards and market research as needed to understand evolving evidence requirements and gaps for payers and IDNs in assigned therapeutic areas
- Collaborate with Head of HEOR and Market Access colleagues in ICER assessments and responses related to assigned
Where You'll Work
We have (2) field based roles located in the Central and East which requires domestic travel as required, approximately 20-30%
Who You Are
- A Master's Degree in a relevant discipline (e.g., health economics, health services research, medicine, pharmacy, public health, psychology)