Keith Strier is Principal with the Health Sciences & Government Practice at Deloitte & Touche LLP, and serves as both a Global Lead Client Service Principal and as Co-Leader of Health Informatics. Keith advises a broad portfolio of clients on the future of biomedical innovation, informatics and secondary uses of health data, emerging business models and the impact of globalization on discovery and delivery.
Keith is a Guest Lecturer at the Harvard Medical School / MIT Health Science Technology Program and a Strategic Advisor to Harvard’s Center for BioMedical Informatics. Keith has also lectured on healthcare innovation at UCLA’s LA BioMedical Research Institute, UC Irvine’s School of Business Healthcare MBA Program and USC’s Marshall School of Business, Global BioBusiness Initiative; and was a featured speaker at the Mayo Clinic’s Inaugural Symposium on Innovation in Healthcare. Keith is also an invited lecturer internationally, serving as the keynote at the Summit on Information Systems in Translational Research at Seoul National University in Seoul, South Korea (March 2008) and as a Visiting Lecturer at Peking University Medical Center in Beijing, China (March 2009).
Mr. Strier earned a Bachelor’s of Science in Industrial & Labor Relations with Honors from Cornell University (1993) and a Law Degree from New York University’s School of Law (1996).
Keith has had a life-long commitment to community service and helping children. Twenty years ago, Keith was a certified Emergency Medical Technician and served on the volunteer Ambulance Corps, often as the first responder for pediatric medical emergencies. Later at Cornell, Keith joined the Big Brother program, developing an inseparable bond with a six year old boy, Scott, who is now twenty four years old, and a successful restaurant executive and sommelier in Boston. Through his work as a first responder and Big Brother, Keith developed a passion for giving back, and is honored to support the mission of Miracles for Kids by serving as its primary interface to the health industry and medical community.



