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Introducing YoungEHA: you don’t have to grow old to make a difference
By Dr. Fabienne Lucas, MD PhD, YoungEHA Committee. Hearing exciting new research, attending lectures by leaders in the field, and networking are some of the obvious things that are happening during the annual EHA congress.
Read moreHighlights from the SWG
Project groupsPan-European Transfusion Research infrAstructure (PETRA) projectThe European Blood Alliance has provided funding for a health science data project entitled: ‘Towards a Pan-European Transfusion Research infrAstructure (PETRA).
Read moreIn Memoriam Jean Claude Brouet
Professor Jean Claude Brouet passed away on December 12, 2022 at the age of 80.
Read moreEU health policy: limited scope, high ambition
Over the past decades, the European Union (EU) has become more involved in public health policy. A recent study showed that a majority of policymakers even identifies EU health policy as a priority for 2020-20241.
Read moreEHA-SSH Joint membership
We are pleased to inform that EHA and the Swiss Society of Hematology (SSH) have joined forces and are offering you the possibility of an EHA-SSH Joint Membership in 2023.
Read moreScientific relations
Engagement and collaboration with EU scientific and research policies, networks and projects on behalf of hematologists in a way that benefits all sides – researchers, diagnosticians and clinicians as well as policymakers and regulators – is an important part of…
Read moreRegulation on Health Technology Assessment
The Regulation on Health Technology Assessment (HTAR) was proposed by the European Commission in 2018. It was formally adopted in December 2021 and will apply from January 2025.
Read moreMessage from the EHA President
As the year closes, is with great pleasure that I reflect on 2021, six months into my Presidency of the European Hematology Association (EHA). It is also time to look forward to the new year.
Read moreThe Clot Thickens
Haemophilia B is a genetic bleeding disorder, affecting approximately 80,000 males worldwide1, caused by an insufficient or dyfunctional blood clotting protein called factor IX (FIX).
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