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Signal faible #archive -> industriels et décideurs politiques, ne dites pas que vous ne pouviez pas savoir/prévoir. cf 2022.

24 avril 2025 : grand sommet sur la sécurité énergétique, organisé par l’Agence internationale de l’énergie (AIE) et le gouvernement britannique #Brexit.

28 avril 2025 : black-out électrique.

On a changé de siècle, pas les réseaux nationaux de distribution d'électricité.

Download 10,000 of the First Recordings of Music Ever Made, Courtesy of the University of California-Santa Barbara via Open Culture [Shared]

Long before vinyl records, cassette tapes, CDs and MP3s came along, people first experienced audio recordings through another medium — through cylinders made of tin foil, wax and plastic. In recent years, we’ve featured cylinder recordings from the 19th century that allow you to hear the voices of Leo Tolstoy, Tchaikovsky, Walt Whitman, Otto von Bismarck and other historic figures. Those recordings were originally recorded and played on a cylinder phonograph invented by Thomas Edison in 1877. But those were obviously just a handful of the cylinder recordings produced at the beginning of the recorded sound era.

welchwrite.com/blog/2025/05/16

New paper uses the #Opioid #Archive to examine clinical decision support algorithms used to assess risk in pain management & the pharmaceutical industry’s role in shaping the digital transformation of opioid prescribing. #PublicHealth #CDoH doi.org/10.1007/s11606-025-096

SpringerLinkThe Rise of Clinical Decision Support Algorithms in Pain Management 2009–2024 - Journal of General Internal MedicineThis paper examines the rise of clinical decision support algorithms used to assess risk in pain management and the opioid industry’s influence on their development and implementation. To understand this influence, we conducted a qualitative study of documents related to the development of a tool that relied on artificial intelligence (AI) to suggest modifications in opioid prescribing, called NarxCare. The study began with keyword searches of the Opioid Industry Document Archive (OIDA), which contained over 3 million documents at the time of the study, to examine the pharmaceutical industry’s role in shaping the digital transformation of opioid prescribing. Our findings highlight industry-driven investments, educational campaigns, corporate policy activities, and the reliance on proprietary data that facilitated the widespread implementation of NarxCare. The increasing reliance on NarxCare raises concerns about its limited transparency, unknown reliability, and potential bias which may disproportionately affect certain patient groups based on race, socioeconomic status, or health conditions. This paper argues that the promotion of technologies like NarxCare allows the pharmaceutical industry to reinforce the narrative that opioids can be effective when prescribed responsibly, using advanced, data-driven strategies. Marketed as tools that assist clinicians in making more informed prescribing decisions, NarxCare contributes to the portrayal of the industry as a responsible actor in the regulation and distribution of opioids. Shifting attention to individual risk factors rather than systemic challenges enables the pharmaceutical industry to sidestep its role in the opioid crisis and evade scrutiny for its influence over regulation, the sponsorship of education and research, lobbying, supply chain control, and public health narratives. While NarxCare aims to improve prescribing safety, it requires critical evaluation in terms of effectiveness, ethical considerations, and the continued influence of the pharmaceutical industry in its design and implementation.