Profile
Penny Timpert
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About Me:
I’m a polymer science technologist and I’m a mum of three teenage boys. I grew up outside Chester, handy for the mountains of Snowdonia and the seaside. I love hiking and being in the water. Luckily I work in Switzerland now so both are still close by!
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I love science. I love that it is the foundation of absolutely everything. I love what you can do with it. My parents are a Chemical Engineer and a Chemist, both with a love of technology and they passed on that passion. Now my own three teenage sons are showing it is in their genes too.
My oldest son (19) is studying Mechanical Engineering at University, the next one down (18) has a passion for Natural Sciences (Physics, Chemistry and Maths) and my youngest son (13) is heading towards Game Design. (All three of them are on-line as I type this playing “Space Engineers” together.) Exchanges with my sons and their friends give me a window into so many fascinating areas. I’d like to be able to do my bit to spark that interest in others too.
Outside work, I volunteer as an “expert patient” (along with other patients from all walks of life). We work with clinical research groups in various hospitals to help them understand what it is like to be a patient with a particular disease & what is important to us in our day to day lives. We all learn a lot from the discussions and each other.
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My pronouns are:
she/her
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My Work:
I make sure people get safe medicines that help them get better and work all over the world.
I studied “Chemistry with Computer Science” at Uni, then later I studied “Polymer Science and Technology with Medical Applications”.
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My favourite subject at school was CDT (Craft, Design & Technology). In those days it was a “boys only” subject so I had to fight a bit to be able to choose it as an “O” Level and I was the only girl in the class. I really liked languages and science too. Computers were still a new thing and I was one of the first people to do a Computer Science “A” level. We didn’t have Windows then, only text-based programs.
When I left school, I studied Chemistry with Computer Science at university full-time, then later I studied Polymer Science & Technology with Medical Applications part-time while working.
Over my career, I’ve lived and worked in many countries such as England, Germany, Holland, Italy, Belgium, France, Canada, America, Switzerland and Japan. I speak English & German and have lived in Switzerland for 16 years. My work mates in my team are spread all over the world.
When I graduated, I first worked for Smith & Nephew in “Process Development”, taking ideas from the laboratory-based Research Scientists and working out how to turn their ideas into reality at production scale. I developed plastic materials for all sorts of uses from sticking plasters to new knee joints.
A two tonne reactor (production size) is a lot bigger than a jam jar (laboratory size), but the end product (a big batch of plastic resin) needs to come out with the same properties, like making a gigantic cake rather than a tray of muffins and it still needing to be tasty and cooked through.
After Smith & Nephew, I joined Deloitte, and later PricewaterhouseCoopers as a Management Consultant. My job was to help companies organise their work in a simpler way, often helping to design computer systems to make their work easier.
Now I work at Roche Pharmaceuticals in “Patient Safety & Risk Management”. I help my colleagues get the right tests & treatments to their local doctors and nurses as quickly and as safely as possible in over a hundred countries.
You can find out lots more about where I work here https://app.aumivi.ch/en/rochebasel/rochebasel
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My Typical Day:
I spend most of my week working from home, which is great because I can be with my family and still work with people all over the world. I can “visit” all my colleagues by video call and enjoy learning about where they are and their cultures too.
My job these days is desk-based and I connect people from different parts of the company who are based all over the world.
Sometimes it is already sunset where they are and it is only sunrise for me. That is quite funny.
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I wake up, get my youngest son out to school at 7am and then have a coffee while I check my email.
After that I have lots of video calls with different groups of people to catch up on what they are doing and if they have any local problems they need some help with. We put our different ideas together and work out what to do. Sometimes we work on it as a team and sometimes we give the work to another team because they have more experience in that subject.
My meetings are mostly with people in the Asia Pacific region in the morning – then with people in Europe across the middle of the day – and with the Americas in the late afternoon. We all use English to talk to each other.
Each day brings me together with different people from all sorts of backgrounds such as IT, production, quality assurance, product strategy, clinical trials, data management or medical information. It is really interesting.
Around 6pm my calls are done for the day and my sons and I all have dinner together at 7pm.
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What I'd do with the prize money:
A good friend of mine (we have known each other since the second year at secondary school) is very involved in “Outdoor Classroom Day”. If I’m lucky enough to be voted the winner then she and I will put the prize money to good use there.
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Education:
I went to school near Chester in the North West of England and studied at Manchester University.
While I was at Secondary School, I worked in the kitchen of the local chinese restaurant washing dishes at the weekend. In my Sixth Form holidays I worked at Shell’s Thornton Research Center and then in my University holidays I worked at ICI’s Research Center in Runcorn. These were really good experiences because they taught me a lot of things I didn’t learn about at school about what it is like at work. It gave me a much better understanding of how the theory I was learning at school could be put to good use in real life and what it was like to work in a team under unpredictable time pressure.
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Qualifications:
At High School I studied Maths, English Language, English Literature, French, German, Chemistry, Physics, Biology and CDT (Craft, Design & Technology) as “O” Levels.
Then I went to Sixth Form College in Chester and studied Maths, Physics, Chemistry, Computer Science and General Studies as “A” Levels.
After that I went to Manchester University and studied Chemistry with Computer Science.
Later, once I had started work, I went back to UMIST part-time to study Polymer Science & Technology.
I’m still studying now and most recently completed my qualification as a “Patient Expert” with European Patientsā Academy on Therapeutic Innovation (EUPATI) Switzerland at Basel University š
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Work History:
There are quite a few! Here they are, most recent first and oldest last:
Ā F.Hoffmann-La Roche AG (Ā«RocheĀ»), Pharmaceuticals Division Global HQ Licence to Operate (LTO) Lead, Global Product Development Safety & Risk Mgmt
Deputy Data Delivery Responsible for PSMF, Product Development Safety & Risk Mgmt
Portfolio Lead, Global Product Development Safety & Risk Management
Business Transformation Leader, Global Medical Affairs
Change Leader, Global Medical Affairs
Global Project Manager, Global Medical Affairs
Freelance Scientific & Medical Translator (German to English)
IBM Business Consulting Services
Programme Manager, Global Delivery Excellence
Senior Managing Consultant, Global Life Sciences Practice
PricewaterhouseCoopers Consulting
Senior Managing Consultant, Global Life Sciences Practice
Senior Management Consultant, Global Programme Leadership Service Line
Global R&D Planning Manager, S&N Research Ltd
European Business Analyst, S&N Europe Ltd
Development Scientist & Section Project Lead, S&N Research Ltd
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Current Job:
F.Hoffmann-La Roche AG (Ā«RocheĀ»), Pharmaceuticals Division Global HQ in Basel, SwitzerlandĀ
My job title is “Licence to Operate (LTO) Lead, Global Product Development Safety & Risk Management”. Roche is a large, complex company. I am in Product Development within the Pharmaceuticals Division. Keeping Roche’s medicines safe for the people who need them is what my job is about.
https://www.roche.com/about/sustainability/approach/risk-management
Each year, around 150 million people all over the world receive one of RocheāsĀ approved medicines. Safety risk management begins in the early stages of the medicineās development and continues for the entire time the medicine is on the market. This helps us to identify possible side effects before they happen, so we can try to prevent them.
My work as License to Operate (LTO) Lead helps many different groups of people (Medical and GxP Compliance, Healthcare Compliance, Group Legal Compliance, Risk Management, Access, Commercial and SHE) work together to ensure their safety.
https://www.roche.com/about/sustainability/patient-safety/reporting
I’m not alone. All in all, there were close to 400ā000 instances of suspected adverse events reported in association with Roche medicines. To be able to handle all of this, a total of more than 2,000 Roche employees professionally deal with patient safety issues, at the global, regional and local level.
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Employer:
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My Interview
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What did you want to be after you left school?
I wanted to be a Biomedical Engineer, designing artificial limbs for people who had lost theirs.
Were you ever in trouble at school?
I was very very shy and quiet. I have dyslexia and adhd, but that wasn't picked up on until I was an adult. I was great to doing homework & coursework but bad at exams so some teachers thought I must be getting my parents to help. I wasn't, I just wasn't under time pressure at home (and it was less noisy). Once I started work, I could structure my time more flexibly, which helped a lot. I can do some things much more quickly than other people and am slower at other things.
If you weren't doing this job, what would you choose instead?
Teaching crafts to people of all ages. I really enjoy learning how to make new things and helping others learn how to do it too. In my spare time, I help run candle making and pottery workshops, for example.
Who is your favourite singer or band?
Ones from the 80s & 90s
What's your favourite food?
Indonesian
If you had 3 wishes for yourself what would they be? - be honest!
1) I wish I could teleport from place to place around the world. 2) I wish I could understand every language. 3) I wish I could get more done in a day.
Tell us a joke.
What did the zero say to the eight? Nice belt!
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