Dear EUPHA Public Health Economics (EUPHA-ECO) members,

 

We are pleased to share the first EUPHA-ECO newsletter of 2026, covering updates from the first three months of the year. In this edition, we highlight key opportunities for our section in the run-up to the 19th European Public Health Conference in Bilbao, relevant news on health systems, prevention, digital health and health policy, selected funding and event opportunities, open positions in health economics, and recent publications from our members.

The first months of 2026 have already shown how important public health economics remains in current debates: from health system resilience and workforce capacity to digital health, AI, prevention, obesity, equity, and the economics of investing in health and wellbeing.

As always, please feel free to share updates, job openings, events, and recent papers via this form or our section email: eupha.public.health.economics@gmail.com.

 

Looking ahead to Bilbao

The new year has started at full speed across the European public health community, and we are especially looking ahead to the 19th European Public Health Conference, which will take place in Bilbao, Spain, from 10–13 November 2026, under the theme “Urban and global synergies: shaping the future of public health with climate resilience, equity and innovation.” Abstract submission is open, and the deadline is 1 May 2026 at 18:00 CET. Conference registration opens 1 April 2026

We strongly encourage EUPHA-ECO members to submit abstracts, workshops, and other contributions so that public health economics is again strongly represented in Bilbao. The conference theme offers many natural entry points for our section, including prevention economics, health inequalities, fiscal and commercial determinants of health, climate and health, digital transformation, health system resilience, and methods for priority setting and evaluation.

 

News on health systems, policies, prevention, and digital health

Several March updates are particularly relevant for EUPHA-ECO members.

From the European Observatory on Health Systems and Policies

  1. The Observatory highlighted a new book, Demystifying AI in Health, aimed at making AI in the health sector more accessible while addressing ethics, safety, bias and governance. 
  2. It also featured a new European Journal of Public Health supplement on the co-benefits of health, which argues that health should be understood as a strategic investment generating wider returns across sectors, including productivity, equity and climate resilience. 
  3. In addition, new policy work addressed timely discharge from hospitals, the need for a European health and care workforce strategy, and new health system summaries for Tajikistan and North Macedonia. These are highly relevant for ongoing debates on system performance, resource allocation and resilience.

AI and digital health

  1. The ERC has published a new overview showing how frontier research is advancing AI in prevention, early detection, diagnosis, treatment and disease management, covering 238 ERC-funded projects using AI approaches in health.
  2. The European Commission’s Observatory for Digital Health Technologies in Europe has released a report on Europe’s digital health landscape, emphasizing both the scale-up potential of digital health, and persistent structural problems, such as fragmentation, interoperability gaps, reimbursement instability, and dependence on non-European suppliers. Particularly relevant for health economists is the report’s emphasis on productivity effects, market growth, and the economic case for scaling technologies beyond pilot phases.

Health promotion, equity, and prevention

  1. At the March EPSCO Council, ministers adopted conclusions on investing in children and strengthening action on child poverty and wellbeing. 
  2. The European Parliament debated obesity prevention, including healthier food environments, affordable healthy food, nutrition education and fiscal measures. 
  3. The European Commission also presented its Gender Equality Strategy 2026–2030, which for the first time includes gender health as a dedicated policy area
  4. EuroHealthNet additionally supported the launch of the Exposome Alliance, aimed at putting prevention and environmental and social determinants more centrally into EU policymaking.

Health systems and workforce

  1. The health workforce remains high on the European agenda. The Observatory and EHMA both stressed the need for a stronger European health and care workforce strategy, linking shortages, preparedness, retention and health security. This is a particularly important agenda for EUPHA-ECO, given the need for stronger economic evidence on workforce planning, incentives, training, retention, and productivity.

 

Courses and conferences

Conferences

 

Courses

 

Job positions

Do not hesitate to share further open positions with us for inclusion in future newsletters.

 

Recent papers

We are very interested in knowing what you are working on! Let us know if you would like us to share your recent publications in future issues.

 

Filipa Sampaio, MPH, PhD (LinkedIn) – EUPHA-ECO Steering Committee member

João Vasco Santos, MD MPH PhD (LinkedIn) – EUPHA-ECO President

Vanessa Gorasso, MSc (LinkedIn) – EUPHA-ECO Vice-President







Unsubscribe

If you would like to unsubscribe from the section ‘Public health economics’ please click here.





Subscribe to the EUPHA newsletter

Subscribe to our newsletter

We periodically send out interesting information relating to our section in the form of news, facts and details of conferences and meetings.

To stay up-to-date and be a part of our activities, please subscribe to our section using the subscribe button below.

Subscription to

We periodically send out interesting information relating to our project in the form of news, facts and details of conferences and meetings.

To stay up-to-date and be a part of our activities, please subscribe to our project using the subscribe button below.