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市場調查報告書
全球臍帶血銀行:影響決策的因素
Choices in Cord Blood Banking: Factors Influencing Parental Decision-Making
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全球臍帶血銀行:影響決策的因素 是由出版商BioInformant在2009年04月所出版的。
這份英文市場調查報告書價格從美金3295起跳。
此報告書調查分析關於全球以及主要地區的臍帶血銀行產業動向,並彙整了產業概要、民間•公共組織動向、相關法令規定,以及成本分析、 企業•技術的各種比較分析,還有對於臍帶血銀行的相關認知程度、臍帶血提供的決策與影響因素、情報取得途徑等針對孕婦所實施的調查結果資料。報告書之內容摘要如下所示。
第1部 臍帶血銀行產業概要
第1章 概要
第2章 臍帶血幹細胞
第3章 臍帶血銀行產業
- 由來
- 民間組織•公共組織
- 美國公共銀行
- 美國民間銀行
- 有醫療需求的美國家庭免費計畫
- 國際性銀行
第4章 市場特徵
- 美國民間臍帶血銀行清單
- 美國公共臍帶血銀行清單
- 美國來自郵寄與捐贈的臍帶血銀行
- 加拿大臍帶血銀行明細:公共 vs 民間 / AABB認可 vs 無認可
- 全球臍帶血銀行
- 墨西哥
- 中南美
- 英國
- 歐洲
- 中東
- 印度
- 亞洲
- 澳洲•紐西蘭
- 非洲
- 全球公共臍帶血銀行清單
- 全球AABB認可臍帶血設施清單
第5章 美國臍帶血相關法令
第6章 國際分析:動向•政策•產業狀況(國別)
第7章 成本分析
- 臍帶血價格不統一的理由
- 美國臍帶血企業的價格幅度
- 加拿大臍帶血企業的價格幅度
第8章 各種比較分析
第2部 對孕婦的意識調查
第1章 調查概要
第2章 認知程度
第3章 影響認知的因素
第4章 影響決策的因素
第5章 對健康統計的反應
第6章 孕婦的期待
第7章 動向
第8章 會使用的資訊網站
第9章 民間臍帶血銀行
Abstract
Overview:
Cord blood banking is increasingly being used to improve and save lives. Stem
cells derived from umbilical blood have been used in more than 14,000
transplants worldwide to treat a wide range of blood diseases, genetic and
metabolic disorders, immunodeficiencies and various forms of cancer. However,
many expectant parents still do not fully understand the significance of cord
blood storage. A study published in the Journal of Reproductive Medicine shows
that a third of expectant parents are unaware of the option to preserve cord
blood. Of the two-thirds who have some knowledge, 74% describe themselves as
"minimally informed."
Part 1 of this market report used proprietary data-derivation techniques to
analyze conditions of the cord blood banking industry. Part 2 of this report
used an end-user survey of expectant parents to identify and analyze the
factors involved in the decision to privately store, publicly donate, or
discard cord blood at birth. More than 1,200 expectation parents throughout
the U.S., Canada, Europe, Asia, South/Central America, Australia and other
international regions answered the detailed survey between Nov. 15, 2008 -
Jan. 15, 2009.
The report includes:
- Rates of awareness by gender, income, geographic location, and education
- Sources through which expectant parents learn of cord blood preservation
- Factors influencing private vs. public storage of cord blood
- Price sensitivity and quality expectations
- Approaches for communicating with expectant parents
- Key factors influencing the decision to store cord blood
- Parental responsiveness to health statistics
- Trends in cord blood banking
- Competitive analysis of the cord blood banking industry
- And Much More...
Table of Contents
PART 1: CORD BLOOD BANKING, INDUSTRY OVERVIEW
I. Abstract
II. Cord Blood Stem Cells
- A. Fetal Cord Blood Characteristics
- B. Existing Treatments
- C. Future Applications
III. Cord Blood Banking Industry
- A. History
- B. Private vs. Public Cord Blood Banks
- 1. U.S. Public Banks
- a. Overview
- b. Number of Public Banks
- c. Geographic Distribution
- 2. U.S. Private Banks
- a. Overview
- b. Number of U.S. Private Banks
- c. Geographic Distribution
- 3. Free Programs for U.S. Families with Medical Need
- 4. International Banks
- a. Overview
- b. Number Private Cord Blood Banks by International Region
IV. Market Characterization
- A. List of U.S. Private Cord Blood Banks
- B. List of U.S. Public Cord Blood Banks
- C. U.S. Mail-In Donation Cord Blood Banks
- D. Breakdown of Canadian Cord Blood Banks - Public vs. Private / AABB
Accredited vs. Non-Accredited
- E. International Cord Blood Banks
- 1. Mexican Cord Blood Banks
- a. Private Banks
- b. Public Banking System
- 2. South/Central American Cord Blood Banks
- a. Private Banks
- b. Public Banking System
- 3. United Kingdom Cord Blood Banks
- a. Private Banks
- b. Public Banking System
- 4. European Cord Blood Banks
- a. Private Banks
- b. Public Banking System
- 5. Middle Eastern Cord Blood Banks
- a. Private Banks
- b. Public Banking System
- 6. Indian Cord Blood Banks
- a. Private Banks
- b. Public Banking System
- 7. Asian Cord Blood Banks
- a. Private Banks
- b. Public Banking System
- 8. Australian / New Zealand Cord Blood Banks
- a. Private Australian and New Zealand Cord Blood Banks
- b. Public Cord Blood Banks by Australian State
- i. New South Wales
- ii. Victoria
- iii. Queensland
- iv. Western Austalia, South Australia, & Tasmania
- 9. African Cord Blood Banks
- a. Private Banks
- b. Public Banking System
- F. List of International Public Cord Blood Banks (Alphabetical by Country)
- G. Worldwide List of AABB Accredited Cord Blood Facilities
V. United States Cord Blood Banking Legislation
- A. U.S. State
- 1. Washington State
- 2. California
- 3. Arizona
- 4. New Mexico
- 5. Colorado
- 6. Texas
- 7. Oklahoma
- 8. Arkansas
- 9. Louisiana
- 10. Tennessee
- 11. Georgia
- 12. Illinois
- 13. Virginia
- 14. Maryland
- 15. Pennsylvania
- 16. Michigan
- 17. Wisconsin
- 18. New Jersey
- 19. New York
- 20. Massachusetts
- B. U.S. Federal
- 1. Institute of Medicine Recommendations Study
- a. Overview
- b. Key Recommendations
- c. IOM Study Shapes National Public Health Policy
- 2. Presidential Executive Order Expanding Approved Stem Cell Lines in
Ethically Responsible Ways
- a. Background
- b. The Order
- 3. The Stem Cell Therapeutic and Research Act of 2005
- a. Background
- b. Current Status of the Act
VI. International Analysis - Trends, Policies and Industry Conditions (by Country)
- A. NORTH & SOUTH AMERICA
- 1. Canada
- 2. Mexico
- 3. United States
- 4. Brazil
- 5. Chile
- 6. Colombia
- B. ASIA
- 1. China
- 2. Japan
- 3. Korea
- 4. Malaysia
- 5. Taiwan
- 6. Singapore
- 7. Thailand
- C. INDIA
- D. AUSTRALIA & NEW ZEALAND
- E. EUROPE
- 1. European Union
- a. Policy Overview
- b. NETCORD Foundation
- 2. France
- 3. Germany & Austria
- 4. Italy
- 5. Netherlands
- 6. Spain
- 7. Poland
- 8. Russian Federation
- 9. United Kingdom
VII. Cost Analysis: Cord Blood Banking
- A. Reasons for Variation in Cord Blood Pricing
- 1. Companies have Flexibility in the Pricing that they Set
- 2. Companies have Variables in the Services that they Offer
- 3. Variable Fee Breakdowns
- B. Range of Pricing for U.S. Cord Blood Companies (1-100th percentiles)
- 1. U.S. Cord Blood Banking Price Range (1-100th%)
- 2. Lowest U.S. Pricing
- 3. Highest U.S. Pricing
- 4. Average U.S. Cord Blood Costs (25-75th percentiles)
- 5. Median Cost of U.S. Storage (50% percentile)
- C. Range of Pricing for Canadian Cord Blood Companies (1-100th percentiles)
- 1. Canadian Cord Blood Banking Price Range (1-100th%)
- 2. Lowest Canadian Pricing
- 3. Highest Canadian. Pricing
- 4. Average Canadian. Cord Blood Costs (25-75th percentiles)
- 5. Median Cost of Canadian Storage (50% percentile)
VIII. Comparative Analysis of Quality Variables
- A. Technical Variables
- 1. Vapor-Phase Storage vs. Liquid-Phase Storage
- 2. Cryo-bags vs. Cryo-vials
- 3. Pentastarch vs. Hetastarch
- 4. Computer Controlled vs. Manual Rate Freezing
- 5. Whole Sample vs. Volume Reduction
- 6. High-Control vs. Low-Control Aseptic Processing
- B. Corporate Variables
- 1. Corporate Stability
- 2. Scientific Expertise
PART 2: EXPECTANT PARENTS, SURVEY RESULTS & FINDINGS
I. Survey Overview
- A. Survey Population
- B. Characterization of Market Survey Respondents
- 1. Geographic Distribution of Market Survey Respondents
- 2. Household Income Distribution of Survey Respondents
- a. All Respondents
- b. U.S. Respondents
- 3. Respondent Breakdown by Race
- 4. Respondent Breakdown by Gender
- 5. Respondent Breakdown by Level of Education
- 6. Respondent Breakdown by Location (City vs. Suburban vs. Rural)
- 7. Regional Breakdown of U.S. Respondents
- 8. Demographic Conclusions
II. Rates of Awareness: Unaware / Minimally Informed / Moderately Informed / Knowledgeable
- A. Overall
- B. By Gender
- C. By Household Income
- 1. All Respondents
- 2. U.S. Respondents
- D. By Education
- E. By Race
- F. By Geographic Location
- 1. Region within U.S.
- 2. Location (City vs. Suburban vs. Rural)
- G. By Number of Existing Children within Family (e.g. Birth Order)
III. Factors Influencing Awareness
- A. Personal Exposure: Relative Impact of Family, Co-Workers, Peers
- B. Informational Sources: Information Sites, Books Medical Pamphlets,
Government Sources
- C. Medical Exposure: General Doctors, Ob / Gyn, Midwifes, Nurse, Other
- D. Promotional Sources: Internet Advertisements, Print Advertisements,
Radio, TV, Other
IV. Factors Influencing Parental Decision-Making
- A. Factors Influencing the Decision Not to Store Cord Blood
- 1. Knowledge Level
- 2. Price Sensitivity
- 3. Safety Concerns
- 4. Lack of Access
- 5. Misconceptions
- B. Factors Influencing the Decision for Private vs. Public Storage of Cord
Blood
- 1. Ethical Beliefs
- 2. Gender
- 3. Total Household Income
- 4. Level of Education (Highest Level Achieved by at Least One Parent)
- 5. Race
- 6. Geographic Location
- a. Region within U.S.
- b. City vs. Suburban vs. Rural
- 7. Access to Reliable Healthcare
- 8. Number of Existing Children within Family (Birth Order)
- 9. Source of Knowledge
- 10. Perceived Support of Medical Staff
- 11. Family Medical History
- C. International Analysis of Cord Blood Banking Perceptions
(Region-by-Region)
V. Parental Responsiveness to Health Statistics
- A. Overview
- B. Health Statistics
- C. Health Statistic Conclusions
VI. Parental Expectations
- A. Quality of Services
- B. Willingness to Educate/Inform
- C. Reputability of Organization
VII. Trends
- A. Rates of Cord Blood Storage (units per year)
- B. Rates of Parental Awareness
- C. Cord Blood Research Publication Rates
- D. Cord Blood Research Funding Levels
- E. Cord Blood Patent Breakdown
- F. Rates of Cord Blood Research Product Development
VIII. Informative Websites: Online Sources Utilized by Expectant Parents
- A. Overview of Websites
- 1. Information Only
- 2. Commercial Affiliation
- B. Dominant Regional Websites (International Analysis)
- C. Most Important Criteria Used to Identify Sites to Inform Decision-Making
- D. Underlying Reasons for Visiting Online Resources
IX. Private Cord Blood Banking: The "Model Customer"
- A. Traits of a "Model Customer"
- 1. "Model Customer" for a Private Cord Blood Bank
- 2. "Model Customer" for a Public Cord Blood Bank
- B. Ideal Price Range
- C. Approaches for Communicating with Expectant Parents
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