One of Med Communications’ clients, a Top 10 pharmaceutical manufacturer, asked for assistance in implementing a new component authoring platform for content creation and management. This platform would allow for…
Standard responses (SRs) are reactive documents that are frequently used in the pharmaceutical industry to reply to unsolicited medical inquiries from health care professionals (HCPs). SRs provide fair, balanced, accurate,…
Founder and CEO, Dr. Allen Scoggin, shares the history of Med Communications and honors the path the company has taken in becoming a trusted, leading provider of medical affairs services…
Implementing a self-service website for HCPs with a searchable online database of standard responses is a growing service for the pharmaceutical Medical Information area. The database allows HCPs to easily…
If you are attending the World Drug Safety Congress Americas in Boston October 18-19, be sure to check out the talk our global head of pharmacovigilance and drug safety, Dr….
Formulary kits are a collection of product-specific scientific documents prepared for health plans, pharmacy benefit management companies, hospitals, and government agencies such as Medicare. They contain the most recent, relevant,…
FAQs are brief documents used by medical information contact centers or other field medical personnel (e.g., medical science liaisons) to provide quick and accurate verbal responses to unsolicited medical information…
Infographics may appear simple, but those little images lift a data-heavy load. Infographics are a visual representation of data, and an effective tool to present key information to an audience…
Med Communications provides high-quality pharmacovigilance support to our clients to ensure that all individual case safety reports (ICSRs) are processed in a timely and accurate manner, independently of the source….
Despite the US public health emergency declaration no longer being in effect, the COVID-19 pandemic continues to have lasting impacts in the US and beyond. The push towards personalization was…