Join our journey towards a better future
Discover the latest news, events, and updates on our collaborative endeavors. Stay informed about our ongoing work, upcoming events, and progress toward our shared goals. Embracing inclusivity, we unite partners from diverse sectors and disciplines to collectively shape the future.
Join Sweden event during ESMO 2024 in Barcelona!
Together with Lif - de forskande läkemedelsföretagen, Business Sweden, Embassy of Sweden in Madrid, Spain, we arranged for the second consecutive year a special evening event during the ESMO congress.
Health and Precision Cancer Care - Do We Have the Competence?
Folkhälsodalen (The Public Health Valley) is a meeting place for decision-makers, professionals, industry, and researchers in public health, medicine, and healthcare. An initiative of Reform Society. The seminars are in Swedish.
A healthy life needs a radiant future!
Folkhälsodalen (The Public Health Valley) is a meeting place for decision-makers, professionals, industry, and researchers in public health, medicine, and healthcare. An initiative of Reform Society. The seminars are in Swedish.
Researcher studies Vision Zero Cancer for future innovation
Are milieus like Vision Zero Cancer a good way to accelerate innovation? At Stockholm School of Economics, doctoral student John-Erik Bergkvist is researching this – the methodology for building a vision-driven innovation milieu.
Vision Zero Cancer becomes host of research network
To transform cancer from a deadly to a curable or chronic disease it is crucial to improve the precision in cancer treatment and follow-up of individual patients' cancer disease. The Partnership for Precision Medicine in Cancer and Vision Zero Cancer are joining forces to accelerate research into precision medicine, with the aim to benefit every cancer patient.
GP’s and PhD students – Elinor and Eliya are looking for ways to detect cancer earlier
Research on cancer, and the standardised care pathways, are mostly based on set diagnoses and are mainly based on research done in secondary care. This became clear to General Practitioners Elinor Nemlander and Eliya Abedi – Sweden needs more primary care-focused research, based on symptoms and not diagnoses.