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AAM promotes Christine Simmon to EVP of policy, strategic alliances

Christine Simmon, who also serves as executive director of the Biosimilars Council, has been with the Association for Accessible Medicines for 13 years.
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The Association for Accessible Medicines has promoted Christine Simmon to the role of executive vice president, Policy and Strategic Alliances. Simmon also serves as executive director of the Biosimilars Council, the AAM subsidiary that advocates for greater access for patients to biosimilar medicines.

She also is the executive sponsor of Women in Health Policy, a group powered by AAM promoting professional effectiveness and development.

[Read more: AAM report: Medicare plans lag in adopting new generics

Simmon has been with the association for 13 years, first from 2002 to 2006, rejoining in 2012. She has held leadership roles in the policy, communications, international, legal, federal government affairs, alliances and meetings departments over the course of her tenure, and has been an integral part of the organization’s growth. She is a lawyer by training and her prior career experience includes senior positions in the health plan, pharmacy benefit management and retail pharmacy industries.

“The AAM Board and I are pleased to elevate Christine to executive vice president, where she leads efforts to strengthen long-term sustainability of the generics and biosimilars industry to achieve our mission of patient access,” said Dan Leonard, AAM president and CEO. “Her deep knowledge of the sector, strategic vision, member-centric approach and successful team-building have proven invaluable to the industry’s leadership and her data-driven approach to policy has contributed to AAM’s track record of successful advocacy for pharmaceutical competition and improved market access.” 

[Read more: AAM supports Biden admin's 100-day supply chain review]

Simmon has led policy and data development in key areas such as access to generics in Medicare and Medicaid and has overseen the expansion of strategic alliance-building to include patient and provider organizations. She recognized the importance of the burgeoning biosimilars industry and its potential to save patients and the U.S. health care system from the burden of costly biologics and helped establish AAM’s Biosimilars Council in 2015 to represent these manufacturers, AAM said.

Simmon has led the Council since its inception and is a widely recognized thought leader in the space. In topline findings from the forthcoming 2021 U.S. Generic and Biosimilar Medicines Savings Report, it was reported that biosimilars have cut the growth of oncology drug spending in half and biosimilars are projected to save the nation $133 billion by 2025.

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