Daniels and led by Scott Zeger, Ph.D., professor of biostatistics at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. These include Johns Hopkins inHealth, launched by Johns Hopkins University President Ronald J. This new partnership will bring together significant foundational assets in the precision medicine area at Johns Hopkins. “These skills and experience have the potential to significantly enhance our capability to diagnose disease, predict outcomes and treat patients better than we currently do.” Rothman, M.D., dean of the medical faculty and CEO of Johns Hopkins Medicine. “The Applied Physics Lab brings significant new data analytics and systems engineering capability to the field of medicine,” says Paul B. The partnership between Johns Hopkins Medicine and the Applied Physics Laboratory leverages the medical and systems engineering expertise resident at the two institutions to create a “learning health system” that will speed the translation of knowledge to practice in these and other key areas. As part of the effort, Johns Hopkins Medicine has identified several similarly challenging conditions for which precision medicine centers of excellence will improve efficiencies and patient outcomes, while fostering new research and treatment platforms. Johns Hopkins Medicine, in partnership with the Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory, today announced a joint effort to apply rigorous data analysis and systems engineering practices in an effort to revolutionize the diagnosis and treatment of disease. Innovative research is what shapes patient care.and join forces to revolutionize medicine.