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jacqueline_surugue

Seminar Title

 

SEMINAR 12: National delegates’ seminar, PHARMINE or pharmaceutical education in Europe – a challenge to all pharmacists

Affiliation

Centre Hospitalier Georges Renon, Niort

Country

France

Jacqueline Surugue is the Immediate Past President of the European Association of Hospital Pharmacists.

She graduated in 1974 from the University of Tours, on the Loire Valley, then specialised in Pharmacology, Toxicology and Management in Paris University. She was first nominated as Hospital Pharmacist in 1976, and became Chief of Department in 1979. Along her career she has always been passionate with international contacts. She got involved in EAHP in 1982 as a member of the French delegation at the General Assembly and was Honorary Secretary of the association when she was elected President in June 2002 and re elected in June 2005.

She is a lecturer in Pharmacy at the University of Angers and an elected member of the national Council of the French National Order for Pharmacists. In August 2006, she has been elected Vice President of the Hospital Section of FIP. From 2007, she is member of the Council of IHE Europe (Integrating the Healthcare Enterprise). She currently is Chief of the Pharmacy Department of Centre Hospitalier Georges Renon, a 1200 beds hospital in the city of Niort (Deux Sèvres).

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Deadline extended to July 15th

Problems caused by shortages are serious, threaten patient care and require urgent action.

Help us provide an overview of the scale of the problem, as well as insights into the impact on overall patient care.

Our aim is to investigate the causes of medicine and medical device shortages in the hospital setting,  while also gathering effective solutions and best practices implemented at local, regional, and national levels.

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Join us in Prague for the 2nd edition of BOOST!

Secure your spot in the Movement for Shortage-Free World

BOOST is where visionaries, innovators, and healthcare leaders come together to tackle one of the biggest challenges in hospital pharmacy—medicine shortages.