Nordic Health 2030 – Pioneering Tomorrow’s Health: Preventive, Personalised, Participatory

The Nordic Health 2030 initiative embodies a commitment to a reimagining of the Nordic healthcare system, steering it away from mainly treating illness, towards prevention, personalisation and participation.

In several sessions, EHiN 2024 opens to learn and discuss the visions in the Nordic Health 2030.

The Nordic Health 2030 initiative is a call to action, recognising that health is foundational to societal progress. We invite you to join this initiative, with its clear-eyed focus on an actionable data-driven technological path forward. It is a blueprint for a future where health systems are humane, personalised and inclusive, with dignity running deep at its core.

The emotional, social, and financial cost of disease is not only borne by the individual and the family, but also by healthcare professionals and wider society, costing societies billions in addition to the billions spent on direct treatment.

The Nordic Health 2030 initiative emphasises a shift from the current sick-care paradigm and practices towards an integrated, preventive, and data-driven approach worthy of the 4th industrial revolution, ensuring direct access to healthcare for all, and the best and most equitable health outcomes for everyone, regardless of gender, background, or location.

The ambition is underpinned by several key concepts, such as:

  • The 5/5 Aspiration: Which aims to reallocate healthcare spending equally between early intervention/prevention and late intervention/treatment
  • The Humanome data model: Designed to support personalised and preventive health services by maximising data usability and individuals’ access to and control over their health data.
  • The Sustainable Health Model: Which illustrates how the flow of health-relevant data between individuals, organisations, and health systems can deliver real-time health insights and dramatically improve healthcare systems’ performance and overall population health.

– Bogi Eliasen, Copenhagen Institute for Futures Studies

Moderator: Bjørnar Alexander Andreassen, Helsedirektoratet