NPI are effective, personalised and non-invasive prevention or care protocols that are evidence-based, referenced and supervised by qualified professionals’ (NPIS Guidelines, 2024). These psychosocial, nutritional and physical practices have been mentioned by health authorities such as the WHO (2003), the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control (2020) and the European Commission (2022), as well as by numerous scientific and medical societies. They improve health, autonomy, survival and quality of life, reduce healthcare expenditure and bring about lasting changes in health behaviour. They strengthen prevention and care and complement biomedical treatments thanks to advances in early diagnosis and the systemic effects of chronic diseases.
However, fake news about health has spread rapidly in recent years, particularly since the Covid-19 pandemic. There is therefore an urgent need to provide an international tool enabling patients, professionals and healthcare operators to identify evidence-based NPIs. A centralised registry coordinated by the NPIS in partnership with numerous partners will enable labelled, described and codified practices to be shared. It will enable better choice, better commitment, better traceability and possible financial coverage.
Pr. Bruno Falissard, Université Paris-Saclay, France
Pr. Kim Lavoie, Université du Québec à Montréal, Canada
Pr. Simon Bacon, Université Concordia, Canada
Dr. Amina Talmat Amar, Maya Solution, France
Mathis Brier, NPIS
Pr. Corinne Caillaud, Université de Sydney, Australie
Dr. Patrizia Carrieri, INSERM, France
Dr. Gianni Franco, NPI Society, Belgique
Dr. Laure Jouatel, NPI Society, France
Dr. Karen Lambert-Cordillac, NPI Society, France
Pr. Guillaume Léonard, Université de Sherbrooke, Canada
Dr. Sébastien Le Garf, Université Côte d’Azur
Dr. Anne Lieutaud, NPI Society, France
Dr. Jean-Bernard Mabire, Université de Tours
Dr. Mathilde Minet, Université de Montpellier, France
Dr. Iveta Nagyova, Université PJ Safarik Kosice
Pr. Grégory Ninot, NPI Society, France
Oral presentations will last 15 minutes followed by 15 minutes of discussion. In order not to fall behind the program, we invite you to respect your speaking time and we suggest that you do not exceed 15 slides for your presentation material (accepted formats: powerpoint or pdf) callforpaper@npisummit.org
Poster sessions will take place on October 15 and 16, 2025 to encourage exchanges and prizes for the best poster will be awarded: Committee Prize
All full paper submissions will be peer reviewed and evaluated based on originality, technical and/or research content/depth, correctness, relevance to conference, contributions, and readability. English and French are the official language of the summit.