LOGOLOGOLOGOLOGO
  • About us
    • What we do
    • Who we are
      • Governance
      • Staff
      • Vacancies
  • Members
    • EuropaBio Members
    • About Membership
  • How we work
    • Healthcare Biotechnology Council
      • Patient BioForum
      • Study – Impact of the EU’s General Pharmaceutical Legislation
    • Industrial Biotechnology Council
      • EFIB
      • Microorganisms
    • National Associations Council
    • SME Platform
    • Biomanufacturing Platform
      • Biotechnology in our Lives
  • Activities
    • 25 Years of Innovation
    • The EU Biotech Act
    • European Biotech Week
    • EU Projects
      • PRIMED Project
      • APROVALS Project
  • News & Events
    • News
    • Events
  • Library
Become a member
✕

Do your best and do not forget, there will always be a next time!

17/02/2023

On the occasion of the International Day of Women and Girls in Science

by Luana Banu, Head of Public Policy, Communications and Patient Advocacy | Takeda

“I was expecting a team of men in suits!” That was the preconception of a university student who came and worked with us at Takeda as an intern. She was pleasantly surprised by our diverse team - led by a woman, too! - and realized that “you can be successful professionally AND have a family”.

These observations got me thinking about preconceived ideas and stereotypes, and how these can often have a profound impact on whether we take a next step in our professional lives, or not.

I also realized how gender roles are still questioned today. For many young women, the dilemma remains: can I really have it all? I think you can be and achieve what you desire, but no one can be or have it all, this is not the right question.

I believe that you do not need to be a “man in a suit”, or a scientist, to work in the pharmaceutical industry. Its complex ecosystem requires different educational backgrounds and capabilities. There is room for many talents. As an expert in Public Policy, not a scientist, I am the living example.

For me it all started with my passion for reading the classics, which led me to study Political Sciences. This reinforced my interest in the world’s toughest problems. I wanted to be part of solving them. Public policy has a significant influence on our freedoms, human rights and socio-economic progress. I appreciated its impact firsthand, when working in the US within a center providing healthcare for uninsured and homeless people.

My husband, a physician working in Research & Development, introduced me to the Pharma industry. When I started to work in Switzerland, I was inspired by the purpose of improving lives with medical innovations, combined with the intellectual stimulation provided by science, people, and business.

I see my job as an ambassador that brings business needs to society and society’s needs to the business. I also see the importance of sharing my story as a female leader to encourage other women to follow their professional passions. To them I offer three personal observations:

1 – Find your sponsor: the turning point in my career was a manager who believed in and trusted me. Under her leadership, I gained confidence and flourished.

2 – Get all the help you can: as a mother and a professional, I rely on a great support network at home, and on a fantastic team at work.

3 – Choose impact over perfection: understand what matters to you and set your own rules accordingly. Be curious, give yourself permission to make mistakes and learn.

As an optimist at heart, my motto is: do your best and do not forget, there will always be a next time!

Share
Communications Team
Communications Team

Related posts

14/11/2025

Vial joins EuropaBio: Reimagining Drug Development with Hyper-Scalable Biotech


Read more
12/11/2025

EuropaBio response to the EU Biotech Act public consultation


Read more
31/10/2025

Healthcare Associations warn of risks from PFAS restriction approach  – failure to assess the impact on the availability of human and animal medicines


Read more

Important links

  • Vial joins EuropaBio: Reimagining Drug Development with Hyper-Scalable Biotech
  • EuropaBio response to the EU Biotech Act public consultation

Categories in our Newsroom

EBIO-white

EuropaBio represents corporate and associate members across sectors, plus national and regional biotechnology associations which, in turn, represent over 5000 biotech companies, 4600 out of them are SMEs.

Contact us

Extra links

Members
Staff
Privacy policy
Legal & cookies
Events
Newsroom

Become a member

Media pack

© 2025 Europabio. All Rights Reserved. Designed by EYAS
Become a member

Vitamin B2

The biomanufacturing of Vitamin B2 led to the reduction of 75% of fossil raw materials and 50% operating costs, compared to the chemical process. Vitamin B2 is used in the food, feed or healthcare sectors.

Insulin

Insulin is one of the most widely known biopharmaceutical. Biotechnology revolutionised its manufacturing process and led to the development of new types of insulin through r-DNA technology.

Detergents

Enzymes and biosurfactancts are alternative ingredients that improve the performance of detergents, while leading to water and energy savings and reductions in CO2 emissions and water toxicity.

Clothes

Clothes made from alternative fibres produced by microorganisms can be 8x stronger than steel, 100% recyclable, biodegradable and replace fossil-fuel based or resource-intensive textiles.

Algal Omega 3

Algal Omega-3 is an innovative feed product for aquaculture. It reduces the impact on climate change by 30-40% compared to fish oil and saves 60 tons of wild fish for every ton of Algal Omega-3 used.

Cheese

Cheese is a vegetarian product thanks to biotechnology. Biotechnology is also essential to produce lactose- or cholesterol-free cheese, as well as alternative proteins.