The new software allows site operators to report safety incidents in real-time and manage investigations through a streamlined digital workflow. Because the application connects directly to Veeva QMS and Veeva Training, a single safety incident can automatically trigger a quality deviation or assign specific retraining requirements. This connectivity removes the need for manual data entry, which often leads to errors in compliance reporting.
Beth Tanner, vice president of Veeva EHS strategy, noted that moving away from legacy platforms provides organizations with greater transparency into leading indicators of risk. For users like Thermo Fisher Scientific, the transition offers a pathway toward AI-driven risk reduction. Early adoption of the platform is scheduled to begin in August 2026, marking a shift toward more proactive, data-centered safety management in the life sciences sector.





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