Medical Writing Authors Hervé Maisonneuve

Hervé Maisonneuve
Section Editor

Hervé Maisonneuve, MD from the University of Lyon (1979), MBA / HEC, Paris (1994), is an Associate Professor in Public Health (Paris). He practiced medicine for 10 years in Lyon hospitals, and has been involved in clinical development programs in the pharmaceutical industry. He was Director of the assessment of the French National Agency for Accreditation and Evaluation in Health. He teaches medical writing, and has a 25 years’ experience with hospital practitioners (most French Academic hospitals). He has written or co-written several books in the field of writing, and has been a member of editorial boards. He is an active member of the European Association of Science Editors, former EASE president (1996-1999) and former chief editor of ‘European Science Editing’ (2000-2006).

Contributions

Journal Watch - Volume 29, Issue 2

Journal Watch is based on the French language blog, Rédaction Médicale et Scientifique, by Hervé Maisonneuve, available at www.redactionmedicale.fr.

Journal Watch - Volume 29, Issue 1

Journal Watch is based on the French language blog, Rédaction Médicale et Scientifique, by Hervé Maisonneuve, available at www.redactionmedicale.fr.

Journal Watch - Volume 28, Issue 4

A novel proposal for article discussion sections

Journal Watch - Volume 28, Issue 3

A proposal to define a new category of bad practice – The non-publication of clinical trial results

Journal Watch - Volume 28, Issue 2

Journal Watch is based on the French language blog, Rédaction Médicale et Scientifique, by Hervé Maisonneuve, available at www.redactionmedicale.fr.

Journal Watch - Volume 28, Issue 1

There is a growing debate in journals and articles on financial and non-financial conflicts of interest (COIs). This debate exists in scientific journals and also in the mainstream media. I provide two examples: the New York Times (NYT) and JAMA.

Journal Watch - Volume 27, Issue 4

Journal Watch is based on the French-language blog Rédaction Médicale et Scientifique by Hervé Maisonneuve available at www.redactionmedicale.fr.

Journal Watch - Volume 27, Issue 3

The vast majority of investigator brochures lack sufficient information to systematically appraise the strength of the supporting pre clinical findings

Journal Watch - Volume 27, Issue 2

Journal Watch is based on the French-language blog Rédaction Médicale et Scientifique by Hervé Maisonneuve available at www.redactionmedicale.fr.

Journal Watch - Volume 27, Issue 1

The one sentence summary of a paper signed by 72 statisticians was: “We propose to change the default P-value threshold for statistical signifi - cance for claims of new discoveries from 0.05 to 0.005”.1 The proposal is straightforward, but it must…

Journal Watch - Volume 26, Issue 4

Journal Watch is based on the French language blog Rédaction Médicale et Scientifique by Hervé Maisonneuveavailable at www.redactionmedicale.fr.

Journal Watch - Volume 26, Issue 3

Data sharing is encouraged by institutions and journals: Authorship of “shared” papers should be clearWhen researchers share data, the teams analysing them want to publish their results. How should authorship of publications be defined? Who are the…

Journal Watch - Volume 26, Issue 2

We need more recommendations to report adverse events in publications

Journal Watch - Volume 25, Issue 4

Journal Watch is based on the French-language blog Rédaction Médicale et Scientifique, by Hervé Maisonneuve available at http://www.redactionmedicale.fr.

Journal Watch - Volume 25, Issue 3

Journal Watch is based on the French-language blog Rédaction Médicale et Scientifique, available at http://www.redactionmedicale.fr.

Journal Watch - Volume 25, Issue 2

Journal Watch is based on the French-language blog Rédaction Médicale et Scientifique, available at http://www.redactionmedicale.fr.

Search

Member Login

Links

The Write Stuff Archive Contact Instructions for Authors Article Template (Word) Journal Policies

Scope

Medical Writing is a quarterly publication that aims to educate and inform medical writers in Europe and beyond. Each issue focuses on a specific theme, and all issues include feature articles and regular columns on topics relevant to the practice of medical writing. We welcome articles providing practical advice to medical writers; guidelines and reviews/summaries/updates of guidelines published elsewhere; original research; opinion pieces; interviews; and review articles.

Medical Writing is listed in the following indexes:

Editoral Board

Editor-in-Chief

Raquel Billiones

Co-Editors

Evguenia Alechine

Jonathan Pitt

Managing Editor

Victoria White

Associate Editors

Anuradha Alahari

Jennifer Bell

Nicole Bezuidenhout

Claire Chang

Barbara Grossman

Sarah Milner

John Plant

Sampoorna Rappaz

Amy Whereat

Section Editors

Daniela Kamir

AI/Automation

Jennifer Bell

Biotechnology

Nicole Bezuidenhout 

Digital Communication

Somsuvro Basu

EMWA News 

Ana Sofia Correia 

Gained in Translation

Ivana Turek

Getting Your Foot in the Door

Wendy Kingdom / Amy Whereat

Good Writing Practice

Alison McIntosh 

In the Bookstores

Maria Kołtowska-Häggström

Lingua Franca and Beyond

Maddy Dyer

Publications

Lisa Chamberlain-James

Medical Communications/Writing for Patients

Payal Bhatia

Medical Devices

Evguenia Alechine

My First Medical Writing

Anuradha Alahari

News from the EMA

Adriana Rocha

Out on Our Own

Tiziana von Bruchhausen

Pharmacovigilance

Clare ChangZuo Yen Lee 

Regulatory Matters

Sam Hamilton

Regulatory Public Disclosure

Claire Gudex

Teaching Medical Writing

Louisa Ludwig-Begall / Sarah Kabani

The Crofter: Sustainable Communications

Louisa Marcombes

Veterinary Writing

Editors Emeritus

Elise Langdon-Neuner

Phil Leventhal

Layout Designer

Chris Monk