The European Medicines Agency
No mentions found
This entity hasn't been tracked yet, or Iris is still building its knowledge base.
Related Articles from SNS
Dangerous synthetic opioids found in fake medicines, EU drug agency warns
New forms of synthetic illicit opioids are flooding the European fake medicines market, contributing to record numbers of drug-related deaths on the continent last year. The EU Drugs Agency warned on Tuesday of the growing availability of these chemicals, such as nitazenes and orphines, particularly in Baltic countries. These substances are highly dangerous — often as potent as cancer pain medication fentanyl, which is more than 50 times stronger than opium.
From approval to access: Europe’s next health imperative
Europe’s health ambition is returning to the political agenda. With a focus on clinical trials, biotechnology and cardiovascular health, the Health Package signals Brussels’ intent to prioritize innovation, research and prevention as pillars of Europe’s competitiveness and resilience. But for many patients, one reality remains unchanged: access to innovative medicines remains too slow. Today, European patients are waiting longer than ever to...
Spain detects 111 cases of rare cancer linked to breast implants
The Ministry of Health has confirmed over a hundred cases of this rare cancer linked to breast implants, mostly in women with textured prostheses. The Spanish Agency of Medicines and Medical Devices (Aemps) has confirmed a total of 111 cases of anaplastic large cell lymphoma associated with breast implants (ALCL) up to 2025, a rare type of cancer linked to breast implants. In total, the agency has received 146 suspected reports since it began monitoring this condition in 2012.
This former Paralympic athlete could become the 1st person with a physical disability to live in orbit
This former Paralympic athlete could become the 1st person with a physical disability to live in orbit "If we can make this mission happen, it won't just be a milestone for human spaceflight; it will send a powerful message about what people with disabilities are capable of, and that there should be no limit to what you can achieve — on Earth or in space." A former Paralympic athlete could end up breaking some records in the final frontier. The U.K. government and the California company Vast...
ISS live: NASA tells astronauts 'shelter now' over major leak in Russian segment
ISS live: NASA tells astronauts 'shelter now' over major leak in Russian segment Astronauts aboard the International Space Station have been told to prepare for evacuation over a worsening air leak Astronauts aboard the International Space Station (ISS) have been ordered to shelter inside their spacecraft after a worsening air leak sparked safety concerns on the orbiting outpost. NASA said the issue is affecting part of the station's Russian segment, where a crew member is attempting...
Microsoft and Mayo Clinic unveil a new ‘safe and trusted’ AI for healthcare
The organisations said the model is being initially deployed within Mayo Clinic’s clinical environment, where it can be tested and refined through real-world use. Microsoft and the nonprofit American academic medical centre Mayo Clinic are developing a new artificial intelligence (AI) model designed specifically for healthcare, in a move aimed at supporting patients, clinicians and consumers, according to an announcement. The organisations said the model will combine Mayo Clinic’s medical...
How Turkey Hacked the Hair Transplant Industry
The astounding growth of the hair-transplant industry in Turkey is not just a medical tourism success story; it’s also a tale of “hacked” medical equipment and algorithmic craftsmanship. From a biological and evolutionary perspective, human hair is often viewed as an unremarkable mass of keratin that still plays some important functions—protecting our scalps from the sun’s harmful ultraviolet rays and regulating our body temperatures—but, for the most part, is no longer essential to our...
The Superbug spill: When medicine goes rogue
The Superbug spill: When medicine goes rogue May 29, 2026At 25, Vanessa Carter was in a devastating car crash in Johannesburg. It broke every bone on the right side of her face and set her on a years-long journey through multiple reconstructive surgeries. Six years on, Carter received a prosthetic implant to reconstruct her cheekbone.
UK media fails to disclose defence sector links in nearly 60% of cases
Executive summary This report reveals how retired senior British military figures are frequently presented in the UK media as purely independent experts on defence and security matters without mention of their personal commercial and employment interests in the defence, technology, intelligence, and security sectors in those reports. By analysing media reports between 2015 and May 2026, AOAV identified a repeated pattern where almost 60% of former key military personnel with links to the...
'A disease anywhere can be a disease everywhere tomorrow morning': Public health expert on Ebola and the threat of future outbreaks
'A disease anywhere can be a disease everywhere tomorrow morning': Public health expert on Ebola and the threat of future outbreaks Live Science spoke with Dr. Ali S. Khan, an epidemiologist and former assistant surgeon general of the U.S. Public Health Service, about the ongoing Ebola epidemic and the U.S.'s preparedness for future outbreaks. A deadly Ebola disease epidemic is rapidly unfolding in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) and Uganda. In May, the World Health Organization...