10th European Conference OVERVIEW PROGRAMME Sustaining resilient WEDNESDAY 1 NOVEMBER THURSDAY 2 NOVEMBER FRIDAY 3 NOVEMBER SATURDAY 4 NOVEMBER 09:00 – 12:30 09:00 – 10:30 08:30 - 09:30 08:30 - 10:00 Pre-conferences Parallel sessions 1 Parallel sessions 4 Parallel session 8

09:40 - 10:40 10:10 - 11:10 and healthy communities Plenary 3 Parallel session 9

10:30 – 11:00 10:30 – 11:00 10:40 – 11:10 11:10 – 11:40 Coffee/tea Coffee/tea Coffee/tea Coffee/tea 11th European Public Health Conference 2018 12th European Public Health Conference 2019 11:00 – 12:00 11:10 - 12:10 11:40 - 13:10 Ljubljana, Slovenia Marseille, France PROGRAMME Plenary 1 Parallel sessions 5 Parallel session 10 12:30 – 13:30 12:00 – 13:15 12:10 – 13:40 13:10 – 14:10 Lunch for pre-conference Lunch – Lunch symposiums and Lunch – Lunch symposiums Lunch – Join the Networks delegates only Join the Networks and Join the Networks

13:30 – 17:00 13:15 - 14:15 13:40 - 14:40 14:10 - 15:10 Pre-conferences Plenary 2 Plenary 4 Plenary 5

14:25 – 15:25 14:50-15:50 15:10 – 16:00 Parallel sessions 2 Parallel sessions 6 Closing Ceremony

Winds of Change: towards new ways Building bridges for solidarity 15:00 – 15:30 15:25 – 15:55 15:50 – 16:20 of improving public health in Europe and public health Coffee/tea Coffee/tea Coffee/tea

17:00 16:05 – 17:05 16:20 - 17:50 28 November - 1 December 2018 20 - 23 November 2019 End of Programme Parallel sessions 3 Parallel sessions 7

Cankarjev Dom, Ljubljana Marseille Chanot, Marseille 17:15 - 18:00 Opening Ceremony

@EPHConference #EPH2018 @EPHConference #EPH2019 19:00 – 21:00 19:00 – 00:30 Welcome Reception Conference Dinner & Dance Stockholm City Hall Munchen Bryggeriet

1 - 4 November 2017 www.ephconference.eu @EPHconference #EPHStockholm STOCKHOLM 1

PLENARY AND PARALLEL PROGRAMME

TRACK A B C D E F G H I K L M N O P Q R S 10th European Public Health Conference ROOM K11 T3 K24 T6 K22 K16 T5 K12 K14 T1 K21 K13 K23 T2 T4 K15 T-foyer T-foyer TRACK NAME COMMUNITIES AND PUBLIC HEALTH POLICY HEALTH INFORMATION HEALTHY LIVING HEALTH PROMOTION HEALTH SERVICES HEALTH SERVICES THE HEALTH INFECTIOUS DISEASES CHRONIC DISEASES MIGRANT AND ETHNIC CHILD AND ADOLESCENT DIET AND PHYSICAL PUBLIC HEALTH PUBLIC HEALTH AND POSTER WALKS POSTER WALKS ENVIRONMENT AND COMMUNICATION RESEARCH WORKFORCE MINORITY HEALTH PUBLIC HEALTH ACTIVITY MONITORING AND OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH REPORTING Thursday 2 Nov Public Landscapes for Upholding public health Health information The Moral Mandate Transformative health Organizing and Global health and Use of indicators for Vaccinating Europe: Prevention and Control Resource for good. Mental health of LGBTs: Swedish Dentistry From potential to Skills building in HTA: Health literacy in To improve Environmental and 09.00-10.30 Public Health (w) research, policy and is beautiful: of Public Health? promotion: why gender financing public health capacity building (rt) good governance in challenges old and of NCDs: the impact of WHO's toolkit is results from national from a Preventive practice: implement how to address the different countries and care occupational health OVERVIEW PROGRAMME practice in a future communicating health Back to Basics (rt) stereotypes and culture services in Europe (w) primary in new (w) the Natural Experiments strengthening Europe's and cross-European Perspective (w) physical activity referral economic impact populations: approaches DOWNLOAD THE CONFERENCE APP (RT, SBS, W) European Union (w) information through matter (w) the Nordic area (rt) Study (sbs) health response to studies (w) schemes (w) of public health to research (w) infographics (sbs) migration (w) interventions (sbs) WEDNESDAY 1 NOVEMBER THURSDAY 2 NOVEMBER FRIDAY 3 NOVEMBER SATURDAY 4 NOVEMBER Thursday 2 Nov PLENARY: SHARING OUR COMMON WEALTH: THE NEED TO STRENGTHEN THE SOCIAL DIMENSION OF THE EU Sustaining resilient 11.00-12.00 VICTORIA HALL Thursday 2 Nov LUNCH SYMPOSIUMS AND JOIN THE NETWORKS 09:00 – 12:30 09:00 – 10:30 08:30 - 09:30 08:30 - 10:00 12.15-13.15 Pre-conferences Parallel sessions 1 Parallel sessions 4 Parallel session 8 Thursday 2 Nov PLENARY: WINDS OF CHANGE: FROM PUBLIC TO PRIVATE, FROM COLLECTIVE TO INDIVIDUAL. HOW CAN PUBLIC HEALTH SYSTEMS ADAPT TO A CHANGING WORLD WE PROUDLY PRESENT THE EPH CONFERENCE APP 13.15-14.15 VICTORIA HALL Thursday 2 Nov Neighbourhoods and Public health Causes and effects in Work and health Tobacco (o) Health services Social determinants Work and health (o) Infectious diseases and Inequalities in physical Marginalisation and Mental health and Children and Skills building seminar: The added value of care: Policies and health Infectious disease 09:40 - 10:40 10:10 - 11:10 14.25-15.25 communities (p) at large (o) public health (p) status (o) research (o) of health (p) vaccines (o) and mental health (o) health: migrants and cognition (p) adolescents (p) From public health transnational public from avoidance (services) in Europe and homeless people (p) lobbying to Public health training (w) to evaluation (p) worldwide Download the Official App for the 10th European Public Health Conference and healthy communities Plenary 3 Parallel session 9 (O, P, W) Affairs management for or search for ‘EPH 2017’ on Apple App Store or Google Play Store. health: a skills building workshop (sbs) 10:30 – 11:00 10:30 – 11:00 10:40 – 11:10 11:10 – 11:40 Thursday 2 Nov Urban health and Policies on NCD risk What works for which Work, health and Smoking patterns and Health systems (o) Health services Work and health (o) Innovative approaches Controlling chronic Migrants' health (o) Mental health and sleep Child and adolescent Food, obesity and Systematic reviews and Maternal health (p) Marginalisation Public health Coffee/tea Coffee/tea Coffee/tea Coffee/tea 16.05-17.05 physical activity (p) factors (o) disease? (o) sickness absence (p) interventions (p) innovative solutions (p) to address AMR (o) conditions (o) disorders (o) health (p) health (p) methods (o) and migration matters 11th European Public Health Conference 2018 12th European Public Health Conference 2019 (O, P) 11:00 – 12:00 11:10 - 12:10 11:40 - 13:10 Thursday 2 Nov OPENING CEREMONY OF THE 10TH EUROPEAN PUBLIC HEALTH CONFERENCE 17.15-18.00 VICTORIA HALL Ljubljana, Slovenia Marseille, France Plenary 1 Parallel sessions 5 Parallel session 10 Friday 3 Nov Public health Epidemiology and Innovative public Working life and health NCDs, prevention Health care access and Environment and Inequality, employment Infectious diseases: Chronic diseases: Migrant health and Isolation, adversity (Mis)behaviour in Nutrition (p) Population based Sexual health: Health promotion Evaluation of 08.30-09.30 interventions and policy (o) health (p) aspects (p) strategies and the quality (p) health (p) and health status (o) planning and timing of systems of care and intervention (p) and connectiveness in adolescents (o) studies (o) sex work and in different innovation prevention of NCDs (o) SDGs (w) interventions (o) outcome (p) childhood (o) sexuality (o) settings PROGRAMME (O, P, W) APP FEATURES INCLUDE: Friday 3 Nov PLENARY: A PARADOX OF PUBLIC HEALTH LEADERSHIP: TOWARDS RESILIENCE IN THE CONTEXT OF VULNERABILITY 12:30 – 13:30 12:00 – 13:15 12:10 – 13:40 13:10 – 14:10 09.40-10.40 VICTORIA HALL n Conference Programme Lunch for pre-conference Lunch – Lunch symposiums and Lunch – Lunch symposiums Lunch – Join the Networks Friday 3 Nov From access, to Evidence into policy (o) Animating the SDGs: Disease and work Risk factors in Empowering cost Active Ageing, Work, disabilities and Immunization in a Prevention and Migrant health: Mental health and Lifestyle in childhood Diet across the life Population health Women's and The health of Health behaviour delegates only Join the Networks and Join the Networks 11:10-12:10 pathways to person experience of applying capacity (p) educational settings (p) accounting for strategic Preventable death (o) changing Europe (p) treatment of settlement and climate change (w) and adolescence (o) course (o) data (o) reproductive health (o) adolescents and n Personalised Programme centered care (o) interlinkages for Global health system Mortality, Injury cardiovascular adaptation (p) young adults (O, P, W) Health (w) decision-making (w) Prevention (p) diseases (p) n Push Notifications 13:30 – 17:00 13:15 - 14:15 13:40 - 14:40 14:10 - 15:10 Friday 3 Nov LUNCH SYMPOSIUMS AND JOIN THE NETWORKS 12.25-13.25 n Interactive Maps Pre-conferences Plenary 2 Plenary 4 Plenary 5 Friday 3 Nov PLENARY: SUCCESSFUL HEALTH INNOVATION: FROM THE ‘WHAT’ TO THE ‘HOW’ 13.40-14.40 VICTORIA HALL n Friday 3 Nov Late Breaker session Strengthening resilience Ferenc Bojan Social security systems Health risks and The patient trajectory (o) Accounting for Occupational health Homelessness and Cancer; risk factors and Migrant and health Psychological resilience Smoking and alcohol use Nutrition and social Public health team Optimization of cancer Work and sickness Burning tobacco Networking with Delegates 14:25 – 15:25 14:50-15:50 15:10 – 16:00 14.50-15.50 in communities through Session (o) and health (p) response in school context (o) issues (o) marginalization (o) consequences (p) services (p) concepts, data and in adolescence (o) determinants (o) mechanism (o) screening programs (w) absence and drug issues public health (o) settings (p) challenges for further n Plenary Speakers Parallel sessions 2 Parallel sessions 6 Closing Ceremony (O,P, W) research (w) Friday 3 Nov How to make health Public health, then, Energy transition as Toward a definition School tobacco policies Out-of-pocket costs in Promoting health The sustainability Storytelling - A powerful Systematic population Monitoring the health The role of music in Health Literacy in Physical activity, Global health and Data Designing an ERIC on Social inequalities Nutrition, body n List of Delegates Winds of Change: towards new ways Building bridges for solidarity 15:00 – 15:30 15:25 – 15:55 15:50 – 16:20 16.20-17.50 promotion in migrant now and in the future: a challenge for public of Good Practices in and adolescents Europe and their effects literacy to facilitate agenda: actions required tool for infectious based targeted CVD of asylum seekers in sustaining resilient and Childhood and healthy ageing and for Decision Making(rt) health information to composition and populations work; 25 years of EUPHA (w) health (w) Public Health: state of smoking: a on health-care use (w) informed decision- to maximize impact disease prevention (w) prevention in primary Europe (w) healthy communities ? Adolescence research. equity: insights from maximize research and maternal health n Partners at Stockholm of improving public health in Europe and public health Coffee/tea Coffee/tea Coffee/tea (RT, SBS, W) practical experience in the art and different cross-comparative making by developing across countries and care is effective (w) A Nordic perspective (rt) HLCA empirical AEQUIPA (w) evidence-based Stockholm (w) experiences (w) European study (w) fact boxes (sbs) regions (w) findings (w) policy-making (w) Saturday 4 Nov Urban environments: Implementing the Civil society governance The Fast Society and Advancing salutogenesis Building resilient health Patient Safety: Ageing society: Climate change and Social Inequalities in Understanding sexual Terrorist attacks and Risk assessment in Healthy and Mapping legal Mapping the European Mental health Mental health n Practical Information 17:00 16:05 – 17:05 16:20 - 17:50 08.30-10.00 action for health and omics evidences into for health: lessons its impact on public for health promotion systems that can Challenges and implications for the mosquito-borne Ageing (w) and reproductive health mental healthcare (w) maternal and child sustainable diets for requirements for HIA knowledge translation 28 November - 1 December 2018 20 - 23 November 2019 equity (w) precision prevention for stronger health health (research) (w) and public health (w) respond effectively to opportunities to keep workforce?: an diseases: from A(edes) to services among migrant health: what, when and European countries (w) institutionalization landscape: Insights from n And much more... End of Programme Parallel sessions 3 Parallel sessions 7 (RT, W) and interventions impacts (rt) global health sustainability in the international perspective Z(ika) and more (w) women in Europe (w) how? (w) across Europe (w) EVIP Net (w) programs (w) challenges (w) continuum of care (w) on worker health (w) Saturday 4 Nov Reflecting on Collating evidence in Building resilience and Sickness absence (p) Drugs and alcohol (p) Primary care and shared Primary prevention Disease and risk of Infectious diseases (p) Diabetes: from risk Health inequalities Violence (p) Young people and future Obesity: epidemiology Public healthcare Health workforce Migrant health Cankarjev Dom, Ljubljana Marseille Chanot, Marseille 17:15 - 18:00 10.10-11.10 community practice in public health (p) promoting decision making (p) strategies in action (w) sickness absence (o) factors to therapeutic across regional and mental health (p) and policy (o) workforce: improving Opening Ceremony health promotion in well-being (w) service (p) social strata (o) quality (p) (O, P, SBS, W) Europe (sbs) Saturday 4 Nov Integration of health Quality strategies Lighting candles, not Fast and clear: how Why, when, and how Future research Primary care in the Public Health Leadership Reducing health Health System responses Terrorist attacks: Appraising Primary Responsible and healthy The cutting edge of Evaluating policy using Chronic disease Nutrition in @EPHConference #EPH2018 @EPHConference #EPH2019 19:00 – 21:00 19:00 – 00:30 11.40-13.10 appraisal within in European health cursing the darkness. to present research to explore stakeholder priorities for more driving seat: how to development: inequalities (w) to migration (w) perceived threat and Care for children and food demand and HTA: Information natural experiments and disability childhood urban planning and systems (w) Applications of health findings in 3 minutes and implementation innovative and accessible create an integrated practice-oriented societal approach (w) adolescents in Europe: supply (w) and Communication and quasi-experimental Welcome Reception Conference Dinner & Dance (RT, SBS, W) environmental impact information across to a non-scientific risks in complex health health services and people-centred interactive follow up of are we measuring the Technologies (w) methods (w) Stockholm City Hall Munchen Bryggeriet assessments (w) Europe (w) audience (sbs) interventions (sbs) systems (TO-REACH)(sbs) workforce? (w) plenary (rt) right things? (w) Saturday 4 Nov LUNCH AND JOIN THE NETWORKS 13.10-14.10 Saturday 4 Nov PLENARY: PREPARING COMMUNITIES FOR PUBLIC HEALTH EMERGENCIES 14.10-15.10 K1+K2 Saturday 4 Nov CLOSING SESSION OF THE 10TH EUROPEAN PUBLIC HEALTH CONFERENCE 1 - 4 November 2017 www.ephconference.eu @EPHconference #EPHStockholm 15.10-16.00 K1+K2 STOCKHOLM 2 O = Oral presentations P = Pitch presentations RT = Round table SBS = Skills building seminar W = Workshop

PLENARY AND PARALLEL PROGRAMME

TRACK A B C D E F G H I K L M N O P Q R S 10th European Public Health Conference ROOM K11 T3 K24 T6 K22 K16 T5 K12 K14 T1 K21 K13 K23 T2 T4 K15 T-foyer T-foyer TRACK NAME COMMUNITIES AND PUBLIC HEALTH POLICY HEALTH INFORMATION HEALTHY LIVING HEALTH PROMOTION HEALTH SERVICES HEALTH SERVICES THE HEALTH INFECTIOUS DISEASES CHRONIC DISEASES MIGRANT AND ETHNIC MENTAL HEALTH CHILD AND ADOLESCENT DIET AND PHYSICAL PUBLIC HEALTH PUBLIC HEALTH AND POSTER WALKS POSTER WALKS ENVIRONMENT AND COMMUNICATION RESEARCH WORKFORCE MINORITY HEALTH PUBLIC HEALTH ACTIVITY MONITORING AND OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH REPORTING Thursday 2 Nov Public Landscapes for Upholding public health Health information The Moral Mandate Transformative health Organizing and Global health and Use of indicators for Vaccinating Europe: Prevention and Control Resource for good. Mental health of LGBTs: Swedish Dentistry From potential to Skills building in HTA: Health literacy in To improve Environmental and 09.00-10.30 Public Health (w) research, policy and is beautiful: of Public Health? promotion: why gender financing public health capacity building (rt) good governance in challenges old and of NCDs: the impact of WHO's toolkit is results from national from a Preventive practice: implement how to address the different countries and cancer care occupational health OVERVIEW PROGRAMME practice in a future communicating health Back to Basics (rt) stereotypes and culture services in Europe (w) in new (w) the Natural Experiments strengthening Europe's and cross-European Perspective (w) physical activity referral economic impact populations: approaches DOWNLOAD THE CONFERENCE APP (RT, SBS, W) European Union (w) information through matter (w) the Nordic area (rt) Study (sbs) health response to studies (w) schemes (w) of public health to research (w) infographics (sbs) migration (w) interventions (sbs) WEDNESDAY 1 NOVEMBER THURSDAY 2 NOVEMBER FRIDAY 3 NOVEMBER SATURDAY 4 NOVEMBER Thursday 2 Nov PLENARY: SHARING OUR COMMON WEALTH: THE NEED TO STRENGTHEN THE SOCIAL DIMENSION OF THE EU Sustaining resilient 11.00-12.00 VICTORIA HALL Thursday 2 Nov LUNCH SYMPOSIUMS AND JOIN THE NETWORKS 09:00 – 12:30 09:00 – 10:30 08:30 - 09:30 08:30 - 10:00 12.15-13.15 Pre-conferences Parallel sessions 1 Parallel sessions 4 Parallel session 8 Thursday 2 Nov PLENARY: WINDS OF CHANGE: FROM PUBLIC TO PRIVATE, FROM COLLECTIVE TO INDIVIDUAL. HOW CAN PUBLIC HEALTH SYSTEMS ADAPT TO A CHANGING WORLD WE PROUDLY PRESENT THE EPH CONFERENCE APP 13.15-14.15 VICTORIA HALL Thursday 2 Nov Neighbourhoods and Public health Causes and effects in Work and health Tobacco (o) Health services Social determinants Work and health (o) Infectious diseases and Inequalities in physical Marginalisation and Mental health and Children and Skills building seminar: The added value of Hospital care: Policies and health Infectious disease 09:40 - 10:40 10:10 - 11:10 14.25-15.25 communities (p) at large (o) public health (p) status (o) research (o) of health (p) vaccines (o) and mental health (o) health: migrants and cognition (p) adolescents (p) From public health transnational public from avoidance (services) in Europe and homeless people (p) lobbying to Public health training (w) to evaluation (p) worldwide Download the Official App for the 10th European Public Health Conference and healthy communities Plenary 3 Parallel session 9 (O, P, W) Affairs management for or search for ‘EPH 2017’ on Apple App Store or Google Play Store. health: a skills building workshop (sbs) 10:30 – 11:00 10:30 – 11:00 10:40 – 11:10 11:10 – 11:40 Thursday 2 Nov Urban health and Policies on NCD risk What works for which Work, health and Smoking patterns and Health systems (o) Health services Work and health (o) Innovative approaches Controlling chronic Migrants' health (o) Mental health and sleep Child and adolescent Food, obesity and Systematic reviews and Maternal health (p) Marginalisation Public health Coffee/tea Coffee/tea Coffee/tea Coffee/tea 16.05-17.05 physical activity (p) factors (o) disease? (o) sickness absence (p) interventions (p) innovative solutions (p) to address AMR (o) conditions (o) disorders (o) health (p) health (p) methods (o) and migration matters 11th European Public Health Conference 2018 12th European Public Health Conference 2019 (O, P) 11:00 – 12:00 11:10 - 12:10 11:40 - 13:10 Thursday 2 Nov OPENING CEREMONY OF THE 10TH EUROPEAN PUBLIC HEALTH CONFERENCE 17.15-18.00 VICTORIA HALL Ljubljana, Slovenia Marseille, France Plenary 1 Parallel sessions 5 Parallel session 10 Friday 3 Nov Public health Epidemiology and Innovative public Working life and health NCDs, prevention Health care access and Environment and Inequality, employment Infectious diseases: Chronic diseases: Migrant health and Isolation, adversity (Mis)behaviour in Nutrition (p) Population based Sexual health: Health promotion Evaluation of 08.30-09.30 interventions and policy (o) health (p) aspects (p) strategies and the quality (p) health (p) and health status (o) planning and timing of systems of care and intervention (p) and connectiveness in adolescents (o) studies (o) sex work and in different innovation prevention of NCDs (o) SDGs (w) interventions (o) outcome (p) childhood (o) sexuality (o) settings PROGRAMME (O, P, W) APP FEATURES INCLUDE: Friday 3 Nov PLENARY: A PARADOX OF PUBLIC HEALTH LEADERSHIP: TOWARDS RESILIENCE IN THE CONTEXT OF VULNERABILITY 12:30 – 13:30 12:00 – 13:15 12:10 – 13:40 13:10 – 14:10 09.40-10.40 VICTORIA HALL n Conference Programme Lunch for pre-conference Lunch – Lunch symposiums and Lunch – Lunch symposiums Lunch – Join the Networks Friday 3 Nov From access, to Evidence into policy (o) Animating the SDGs: Disease and work Risk factors in Empowering cost Active Ageing, Work, disabilities and Immunization in a Prevention and Migrant health: Mental health and Lifestyle in childhood Diet across the life Population health Women's and The health of Health behaviour delegates only Join the Networks and Join the Networks 11:10-12:10 pathways to person experience of applying capacity (p) educational settings (p) accounting for strategic Preventable death (o) changing Europe (p) treatment of settlement and climate change (w) and adolescence (o) course (o) data (o) reproductive health (o) adolescents and n Personalised Programme centered care (o) interlinkages for Global health system Mortality, Injury cardiovascular adaptation (p) young adults (O, P, W) Health (w) decision-making (w) Prevention (p) diseases (p) n Push Notifications 13:30 – 17:00 13:15 - 14:15 13:40 - 14:40 14:10 - 15:10 Friday 3 Nov LUNCH SYMPOSIUMS AND JOIN THE NETWORKS 12.25-13.25 n Interactive Maps Pre-conferences Plenary 2 Plenary 4 Plenary 5 Friday 3 Nov PLENARY: SUCCESSFUL HEALTH INNOVATION: FROM THE ‘WHAT’ TO THE ‘HOW’ 13.40-14.40 VICTORIA HALL n Friday 3 Nov Late Breaker session Strengthening resilience Ferenc Bojan Social security systems Health risks and The patient trajectory (o) Accounting for Occupational health Homelessness and Cancer; risk factors and Migrant and health Psychological resilience Smoking and alcohol use Nutrition and social Public health team Optimization of cancer Work and sickness Burning tobacco Networking with Delegates 14:25 – 15:25 14:50-15:50 15:10 – 16:00 14.50-15.50 in communities through Session (o) and health (p) response in school context (o) issues (o) marginalization (o) consequences (p) services (p) concepts, data and in adolescence (o) determinants (o) mechanism (o) screening programs (w) absence and drug issues public health (o) settings (p) challenges for further n Plenary Speakers Parallel sessions 2 Parallel sessions 6 Closing Ceremony (O,P, W) research (w) Friday 3 Nov How to make health Public health, then, Energy transition as Toward a definition School tobacco policies Out-of-pocket costs in Promoting health The sustainability Storytelling - A powerful Systematic population Monitoring the health The role of music in Health Literacy in Physical activity, Global health and Data Designing an ERIC on Social inequalities Nutrition, body n List of Delegates Winds of Change: towards new ways Building bridges for solidarity 15:00 – 15:30 15:25 – 15:55 15:50 – 16:20 16.20-17.50 promotion in migrant now and in the future: a challenge for public of Good Practices in and adolescents Europe and their effects literacy to facilitate agenda: actions required tool for infectious based targeted CVD of asylum seekers in sustaining resilient and Childhood and healthy ageing and for Decision Making(rt) health information to composition and populations work; 25 years of EUPHA (w) health (w) Public Health: state of smoking: a on health-care use (w) informed decision- to maximize impact disease prevention (w) prevention in primary Europe (w) healthy communities ? Adolescence research. equity: insights from maximize research and maternal health n Partners at Stockholm of improving public health in Europe and public health Coffee/tea Coffee/tea Coffee/tea (RT, SBS, W) practical experience in the art and different cross-comparative making by developing across countries and care is effective (w) A Nordic perspective (rt) HLCA empirical AEQUIPA (w) evidence-based Stockholm (w) experiences (w) European study (w) fact boxes (sbs) regions (w) findings (w) policy-making (w) Saturday 4 Nov Urban environments: Implementing the Civil society governance The Fast Society and Advancing salutogenesis Building resilient health Patient Safety: Ageing society: Climate change and Social Inequalities in Understanding sexual Terrorist attacks and Risk assessment in Healthy and Mapping legal Mapping the European Mental health Mental health n Practical Information 17:00 16:05 – 17:05 16:20 - 17:50 08.30-10.00 action for health and omics evidences into for health: lessons its impact on public for health promotion systems that can Challenges and implications for the mosquito-borne Ageing (w) and reproductive health mental healthcare (w) maternal and child sustainable diets for requirements for HIA knowledge translation 28 November - 1 December 2018 20 - 23 November 2019 equity (w) precision prevention for stronger health health (research) (w) and public health (w) respond effectively to opportunities to keep workforce?: an diseases: from A(edes) to services among migrant health: what, when and European countries (w) institutionalization landscape: Insights from n And much more... End of Programme Parallel sessions 3 Parallel sessions 7 (RT, W) and interventions impacts (rt) global health sustainability in the international perspective Z(ika) and more (w) women in Europe (w) how? (w) across Europe (w) EVIP Net (w) programs (w) challenges (w) continuum of care (w) on worker health (w) Saturday 4 Nov Reflecting on Collating evidence in Building resilience and Sickness absence (p) Drugs and alcohol (p) Primary care and shared Primary prevention Disease and risk of Infectious diseases (p) Diabetes: from risk Health inequalities Violence (p) Young people and future Obesity: epidemiology Public healthcare Health workforce Migrant health Cankarjev Dom, Ljubljana Marseille Chanot, Marseille 17:15 - 18:00 10.10-11.10 community practice in public health (p) promoting decision making (p) strategies in action (w) sickness absence (o) factors to therapeutic across regional and mental health (p) and policy (o) workforce: improving Opening Ceremony health promotion in well-being (w) service (p) social strata (o) quality (p) (O, P, SBS, W) Europe (sbs) Saturday 4 Nov Integration of health Quality strategies Lighting candles, not Fast and clear: how Why, when, and how Future research Primary care in the Public Health Leadership Reducing health Health System responses Terrorist attacks: Appraising Primary Responsible and healthy The cutting edge of Evaluating policy using Chronic disease Nutrition in @EPHConference #EPH2018 @EPHConference #EPH2019 19:00 – 21:00 19:00 – 00:30 11.40-13.10 appraisal within in European health cursing the darkness. to present research to explore stakeholder priorities for more driving seat: how to development: inequalities (w) to migration (w) perceived threat and Care for children and food demand and HTA: Information natural experiments and disability childhood urban planning and systems (w) Applications of health findings in 3 minutes and implementation innovative and accessible create an integrated practice-oriented societal approach (w) adolescents in Europe: supply (w) and Communication and quasi-experimental Welcome Reception Conference Dinner & Dance (RT, SBS, W) environmental impact information across to a non-scientific risks in complex health health services and people-centred interactive follow up of are we measuring the Technologies (w) methods (w) Stockholm City Hall Munchen Bryggeriet assessments (w) Europe (w) audience (sbs) interventions (sbs) systems (TO-REACH)(sbs) workforce? (w) plenary (rt) right things? (w) Saturday 4 Nov LUNCH AND JOIN THE NETWORKS 13.10-14.10 Saturday 4 Nov PLENARY: PREPARING COMMUNITIES FOR PUBLIC HEALTH EMERGENCIES 14.10-15.10 K1+K2 Saturday 4 Nov CLOSING SESSION OF THE 10TH EUROPEAN PUBLIC HEALTH CONFERENCE 1 - 4 November 2017 www.ephconference.eu @EPHconference #EPHStockholm 15.10-16.00 K1+K2 STOCKHOLM O = Oral presentations P = Pitch presentations RT = Round table SBS = Skills building seminar W = Workshop 3 PLENARY AND PARALLEL PROGRAMME

TRACK A B C D E F G H I K L M N O P Q R S ROOM K11 T3 K24 T6 K22 K16 T5 K12 K14 T1 K21 K13 K23 T2 T4 K15 T-foyer T-foyer TRACK NAME COMMUNITIES AND PUBLIC HEALTH POLICY HEALTH INFORMATION HEALTHY LIVING HEALTH PROMOTION HEALTH SERVICES HEALTH SERVICES THE HEALTH INFECTIOUS DISEASES CHRONIC DISEASES MIGRANT AND ETHNIC MENTAL HEALTH CHILD AND ADOLESCENT DIET AND PHYSICAL PUBLIC HEALTH PUBLIC HEALTH AND POSTER WALKS POSTER WALKS ENVIRONMENT AND COMMUNICATION RESEARCH WORKFORCE MINORITY HEALTH PUBLIC HEALTH ACTIVITY MONITORING AND OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH REPORTING Thursday 2 Nov Public Landscapes for Upholding public health Health information The Moral Mandate Transformative health Organizing and Global health and Use of indicators for Vaccinating Europe: Prevention and Control Resource for good. Mental health of LGBTs: Swedish Dentistry From potential to Skills building in HTA: Health literacy in To improve Environmental and 09.00-10.30 Public Health (w) research, policy and is beautiful: of Public Health? promotion: why gender financing public health capacity building (rt) good governance in challenges old and of NCDs: the impact of WHO's toolkit is results from national from a Preventive practice: implement how to address the different countries and cancer care occupational health practice in a future communicating health Back to Basics (rt) stereotypes and culture services in Europe (w) primary health care in new (w) the Natural Experiments strengthening Europe's and cross-European Perspective (w) physical activity referral economic impact populations: approaches DOWNLOAD THE CONFERENCE APP (RT, SBS, W) European Union (w) information through matter (w) the Nordic area (rt) Study (sbs) health response to studies (w) schemes (w) of public health to research (w) infographics (sbs) migration (w) interventions (sbs) Thursday 2 Nov PLENARY: SHARING OUR COMMON WEALTH: THE NEED TO STRENGTHEN THE SOCIAL DIMENSION OF THE EU 11.00-12.00 VICTORIA HALL Thursday 2 Nov LUNCH SYMPOSIUMS AND JOIN THE NETWORKS 12.15-13.15 Thursday 2 Nov PLENARY: WINDS OF CHANGE: FROM PUBLIC TO PRIVATE, FROM COLLECTIVE TO INDIVIDUAL. HOW CAN PUBLIC HEALTH SYSTEMS ADAPT TO A CHANGING WORLD WE PROUDLY PRESENT THE EPH CONFERENCE APP 13.15-14.15 VICTORIA HALL Thursday 2 Nov Neighbourhoods and Public health Causes and effects in Work and health Tobacco (o) Health services Social determinants Work and health (o) Infectious diseases and Inequalities in physical Marginalisation and Mental health and Children and Skills building seminar: The added value of Hospital care: Policies and health Infectious disease 14.25-15.25 communities (p) at large (o) public health (p) status (o) research (o) of health (p) vaccines (o) and mental health (o) health: migrants and cognition (p) adolescents (p) From public health transnational public from avoidance (services) in Europe and homeless people (p) lobbying to Public health training (w) to evaluation (p) worldwide Download the Official App for the 10th European Public Health Conference (O, P, W) Affairs management for or search for ‘EPH 2017’ on Apple App Store or Google Play Store. health: a skills building workshop (sbs) Thursday 2 Nov Urban health and Policies on NCD risk What works for which Work, health and Smoking patterns and Health systems (o) Health services Work and health (o) Innovative approaches Controlling chronic Migrants' health (o) Mental health and sleep Child and adolescent Food, obesity and Systematic reviews and Maternal health (p) Marginalisation Public health 16.05-17.05 physical activity (p) factors (o) disease? (o) sickness absence (p) interventions (p) innovative solutions (p) to address AMR (o) conditions (o) disorders (o) health (p) health (p) methods (o) and migration matters

(O, P) Thursday 2 Nov OPENING CEREMONY OF THE 10TH EUROPEAN PUBLIC HEALTH CONFERENCE 17.15-18.00 VICTORIA HALL Friday 3 Nov Public health Epidemiology and Innovative public Working life and health NCDs, prevention Health care access and Environment and Inequality, employment Infectious diseases: Chronic diseases: Migrant health and Isolation, adversity (Mis)behaviour in Nutrition (p) Population based Sexual health: Health promotion Evaluation of 08.30-09.30 interventions and policy (o) health (p) aspects (p) strategies and the quality (p) health (p) and health status (o) planning and timing of systems of care and intervention (p) and connectiveness in adolescents (o) studies (o) sex work and in different innovation prevention of NCDs (o) SDGs (w) interventions (o) outcome (p) childhood (o) sexuality (o) settings (O, P, W) APP FEATURES INCLUDE: Friday 3 Nov PLENARY: A PARADOX OF PUBLIC HEALTH LEADERSHIP: TOWARDS RESILIENCE IN THE CONTEXT OF VULNERABILITY 09.40-10.40 VICTORIA HALL n Conference Programme Friday 3 Nov From access, to Evidence into policy (o) Animating the SDGs: Disease and work Risk factors in Empowering cost Active Ageing, Work, disabilities and Immunization in a Prevention and Migrant health: Mental health and Lifestyle in childhood Diet across the life Population health Women's and The health of Health behaviour 11:10-12:10 pathways to person experience of applying capacity (p) educational settings (p) accounting for strategic Preventable death (o) changing Europe (p) treatment of settlement and climate change (w) and adolescence (o) course (o) data (o) reproductive health (o) adolescents and n Personalised Programme centered care (o) interlinkages for Global health system Mortality, Injury cardiovascular adaptation (p) young adults (O, P, W) Health (w) decision-making (w) Prevention (p) diseases (p) n Push Notifications Friday 3 Nov LUNCH SYMPOSIUMS AND JOIN THE NETWORKS 12.25-13.25 n Interactive Maps Friday 3 Nov PLENARY: SUCCESSFUL HEALTH INNOVATION: FROM THE ‘WHAT’ TO THE ‘HOW’ 13.40-14.40 VICTORIA HALL n Friday 3 Nov Late Breaker session Strengthening resilience Ferenc Bojan Social security systems Health risks and The patient trajectory (o) Accounting for Occupational health Homelessness and Cancer; risk factors and Migrant and health Psychological resilience Smoking and alcohol use Nutrition and social Public health team Optimization of cancer Work and sickness Burning tobacco Networking with Delegates 14.50-15.50 in communities through Session (o) and health (p) response in school context (o) issues (o) marginalization (o) consequences (p) services (p) concepts, data and in adolescence (o) determinants (o) mechanism (o) screening programs (w) absence and drug issues public health (o) settings (p) challenges for further n Plenary Speakers (O,P, W) research (w) Friday 3 Nov How to make health Public health, then, Energy transition as Toward a definition School tobacco policies Out-of-pocket costs in Promoting health The sustainability Storytelling - A powerful Systematic population Monitoring the health The role of music in Health Literacy in Physical activity, Global health and Data Designing an ERIC on Social inequalities Nutrition, body n List of Delegates 16.20-17.50 promotion in migrant now and in the future: a challenge for public of Good Practices in and adolescents Europe and their effects literacy to facilitate agenda: actions required tool for infectious based targeted CVD of asylum seekers in sustaining resilient and Childhood and healthy ageing and for Decision Making(rt) health information to composition and populations work; 25 years of EUPHA (w) health (w) Public Health: state of smoking: a on health-care use (w) informed decision- to maximize impact disease prevention (w) prevention in primary Europe (w) healthy communities ? Adolescence research. equity: insights from maximize research and maternal health (RT, SBS, W) practical experience in the art and different cross-comparative making by developing across countries and care is effective (w) A Nordic perspective (rt) HLCA empirical AEQUIPA (w) evidence-based n Partners at Stockholm Stockholm (w) experiences (w) European study (w) fact boxes (sbs) regions (w) findings (w) policy-making (w) Saturday 4 Nov Urban environments: Implementing the Civil society governance The Fast Society and Advancing salutogenesis Building resilient health Patient Safety: Ageing society: Climate change and Social Inequalities in Understanding sexual Terrorist attacks and Risk assessment in Healthy and Mapping legal Mapping the European Mental health Mental health n Practical Information 08.30-10.00 action for health and omics evidences into for health: lessons its impact on public for health promotion systems that can Challenges and implications for the mosquito-borne Ageing (w) and reproductive health mental healthcare (w) maternal and child sustainable diets for requirements for HIA knowledge translation equity (w) precision prevention for stronger health health (research) (w) and public health (w) respond effectively to opportunities to keep workforce?: an diseases: from A(edes) to services among migrant health: what, when and European countries (w) institutionalization landscape: Insights from n And much more... (RT, W) and interventions impacts (rt) global health sustainability in the international perspective Z(ika) and more (w) women in Europe (w) how? (w) across Europe (w) EVIP Net (w) programs (w) challenges (w) continuum of care (w) on worker health (w) Saturday 4 Nov Reflecting on Collating evidence in Building resilience and Sickness absence (p) Drugs and alcohol (p) Primary care and shared Primary prevention Disease and risk of Infectious diseases (p) Diabetes: from risk Health inequalities Violence (p) Young people and future Obesity: epidemiology Public healthcare Health workforce Migrant health 10.10-11.10 community practice in public health (p) promoting decision making (p) strategies in action (w) sickness absence (o) factors to therapeutic across regional and mental health (p) and policy (o) workforce: improving health promotion in well-being (w) service (p) social strata (o) quality (p) (O, P, SBS, W) Europe (sbs) Saturday 4 Nov Integration of health Quality strategies Lighting candles, not Fast and clear: how Why, when, and how Future research Primary care in the Public Health Leadership Reducing health Health System responses Terrorist attacks: Appraising Primary Responsible and healthy The cutting edge of Evaluating policy using Chronic disease Nutrition in 11.40-13.10 appraisal within in European health cursing the darkness. to present research to explore stakeholder priorities for more driving seat: how to development: inequalities (w) to migration (w) perceived threat and Care for children and food demand and HTA: Information natural experiments and disability childhood urban planning and systems (w) Applications of health findings in 3 minutes and implementation innovative and accessible create an integrated practice-oriented societal approach (w) adolescents in Europe: supply (w) and Communication and quasi-experimental (RT, SBS, W) environmental impact information across to a non-scientific risks in complex health health services and people-centred interactive follow up of are we measuring the Technologies (w) methods (w) assessments (w) Europe (w) audience (sbs) interventions (sbs) systems (TO-REACH)(sbs) workforce? (w) plenary (rt) right things? (w) Saturday 4 Nov LUNCH AND JOIN THE NETWORKS 13.10-14.10 Saturday 4 Nov PLENARY: PREPARING COMMUNITIES FOR PUBLIC HEALTH EMERGENCIES 14.10-15.10 K1+K2 Saturday 4 Nov CLOSING SESSION OF THE 10TH EUROPEAN PUBLIC HEALTH CONFERENCE 15.10-16.00 K1+K2 O = Oral presentations P = Pitch presentations RT = Round table SBS = Skills building seminar W = Workshop 4 CONTENTS

ABOUT US ...... 2 WELCOME TO STOCKHOLM 2017...... 3 THREE MONTHS ACCESS TO THE EJPH ...... 4 PLENARY SPEAKERS...... 5 PRE-CONFERENCES WEDNESDAY...... 13 LUNCH SYMPOSIUMS...... 20 JOIN THE NETWORKS ORGANISED BY EUPHA ...... 22 MAIN CONFERENCE THURSDAY...... 23 MAIN CONFERENCE FRIDAY ...... 42 MAIN CONFERENCE SATURDAY...... 67 POSTER DISPLAYS ...... 85 SOCIAL PROGRAMME...... 94 GREENING THE CONFERENCE...... 95 OUR PARTNERS AT STOCKHOLM...... 96 EXHIBITION ...... 97 GENERAL INFORMATION...... 98 FLOOR PLAN ...... 100 ABBREVIATIONS ...... 101

5 ABOUT US The 10th European Public Health Conference is organised by the EPH Conference Foundation, a non-governmental and not-for-profit organisation, established at the initiative of the European Public Health Association (EUPHA). Co-organisers of the conference are EUPHA and the Swedish Association of Social Medicine (SASM).

EPH CONFERENCE FOUNDATION The mission of the EPH Conference Foundation is to contribute to promoting greater health and well-being for the population in Europe by strengthening the field of public health and reducing health inequalities through capacity building and knowledge building. The EPH Conference Foundation organises scientific conferences on public health in Europe on an annual basis. The conferences bring together public health professionals, researchers, education and training specialists and policy makers from across Europe and beyond to develop new thinking and find meaningful solutions for future health challenges. The EPH conferences are organised jointly with EUPHA and a national partner, usually a national public health association. In organising the conference, the EPH Conference Foundation works together in partnership with a wide array of international public health organisations.

EUPHA EUPHA is an umbrella organisation for national (public) health associations in Europe. EUPHA is an international, multidisciplinary, scientific organisation, bringing together around 20,000 public health experts from all European countries. EUPHA unites 39 national associations of public health, 20 institutional members, 7 individuals, and one global member from 46 countries. EUPHA aims to be a leading scientific and independent voice in the field of public health and health services by building capacity and knowledge in the field of public health and health services and by supporting practice and policy decisions through scientific evidence. EUPHA is dedicated to working in partnership with European and international intergovernmental and non-governmental organisations as well as with national institutes and organisations that are aligned with EUPHA's values and commitment to improve current and future health in Europe. In 2017, EUPHA has set up partnerships with 11 international organisations. Established in 1992, EUPHA is celebrating its 25th anniversary at Stockholm 2017.

SWEDISH ASSOCIATION OF SOCIAL MEDICINE The Swedish Association of Social Medicine (SASM) is a national, interdisciplinary association with about 150 members. It was established with the aim to promote the field of social medicine within education, research and practice. The association is both a section within the Swedish Society of Medicine (the scientific organization of the Swedish Medical profession), and a specialist association within the Swedish Medical Association (the doctors’ professional organisation). The goal of SASM of today is to stimulate and promote education, practice and scientific development in Social Medicine. Key tasks include research, relevant policy development and advice on legal matters and participa- tion in the public debate to influence public policies. The association also organizes meetings, seminars, and training courses regularly. We also hold, together with the other associations of public health within the Nordic countries, the Scandinavian Journal of Public Health, which is an international, peer reviewed scientific journal.

Meet EUPHA, EPH Conference and SASM in the Exhibition Hall for more information.

6 WELCOME TO STOCKHOLM 2017 EVERYBODY WILL BE THERE The European Public Health Conference Foundation, the European Public Health Association (EUPHA) and the Swedish Association of Social Medicine are honoured to welcome you to the 10th European Public Health Conference in Stockholm. We are excited to present you this year again with a fully packed programme of inspiring and informative sessions. We expect the attendance of over 1,800 public health researchers, policymakers and practitioners coming from more than 80 countries, making this conference the most important Public Health Conference in Europe and the biggest we have organised so far. The theme for the conference is ‘Sustaining resilient and healthy communities’. Resilience is the long-term capacity of a system to deal with change and continue to develop. For a society it involves an ability to deal with political uncertainty or natural disasters in a way that is sustain- able in the long-term. Resilience is particularly relevant than in these times of dramatic climate change, long-lasting political conflicts and the global migration that follows these developments. Increased knowledge on how to strengthen resilience of societies and health systems to cope with the current challenges is therefore becoming increasingly important. Good health on equal terms for all is the ultimate goal of our efforts. We have chosen five sub-themes for the conference. The first addresses how we can share our common wealth given the financial and political constraints on health systems. Established services need to reach out to all while at the same time new technology and medical progress puts pressure on health systems to deliver new methods for prevention and cure. There is a clear challenge is ensuring efficiency of the system while maintaining equity. The second sub-theme seeks to discuss if Europe is ready for the challenges that public health in a globalized world pose. Communicable diseases are more global than ever spreading with the speed of airplanes across the world in no time. Political conflicts in other parts of the world spill over into Europe as large-scale attacks on civilians with dramatic effects on lives and health. The third theme is captioned "Winds of change". It aims to encourage discussions and work on how to strike an effective and fair balance between public and private sector action and collective and individual responsibilities. The private sector is increasingly active in health promotion. Many new applications and products are being developed to support people in making healthy choices. At the same time, there is little quality control of such products. Health systems under pressure is the fourth sub-theme. Here we seek to discuss how health systems in Europe and elsewhere should develop to meet the mounting pressure from demographic changes due to aging and migration. These changes must be met both with a likely expansion of services and a new orientation in public health and health care towards integrating perspectives of cultures from around the world. Finally, we want to focus on planetary boundaries and health and their interaction. Planetary boundaries define the limits to what the globe can sustain given the rapid development of human civilisation. Pollution of air and water and global warming are just a few of the threats to human health that we see coming towards us at high speed. During Stockholm 2017, we will be celebrating 10 years of successful EPH Conferences as well as 25 years of EUPHA. With the help of the co-organisers, our partners, exhibitors and supporters, we present you an exciting programme of workshops, oral and pitch presentations and poster walks. This is all offered in the wonderful setting of Stockholm giving you the possibility to share information, knowledge and innovative ideas with your colleagues from around the globe. We look forward to meeting you in Stockholm for a few decisive days to discuss all this in our common efforts to promote health for all and prevent poor health - in Europe and elsewhere.

Birger Forsberg Martin McKee Dineke Zeegers Paget Chair of Stockholm President EPH Director EPH 2017 Conference Foundation Conference office

7 THREE MONTHS ACCESS TO THE EJPH

Oxford University Press and the European Public Health Association (EUPHA) are delighted to offer delegates of the EPH Conference – Stockholm 2017 – free online access to the European Journal of Public Health until 31 January 2018 .

The European Journal of Public Health is a bimonthly multidisciplinary journal in the field of public health and provides a forum for discussion and debate of current international public health issues with a focus on the European region. In 2016, the impact factor of the journal is at 2.431. The 5-year impact factor is 2.664.

Login to your EPH Conference account at www.ephconference.eu. Use the same login and password you have used for registering for the conference. Once you have entered, you will see the link to the European Journal of Public Health.

If you wish to submit a paper to the journal, please go to: www.oxfordjournals.org/our_journals/eurpub/for_authors/index.html

Any questions on subscription rates submitting papers? Go find us at the OUP stand in the Exhibition Hall

8 PLENARY SPEAKERS NATASHA AZZOPARDI-MUSCAT, MALTA Natasha Azzopardi-Muscat is President of EUPHA since November 2016. She was previously President of the EUPHA section on Public Health Practice and Policy. She is a founding member and former President of the Malta Association of Public Health Medicine. Natasha is a former Chief Medical Officer for Malta. As a public health civil servant she occupied various senior positions in the Ministry of Health in Malta between 2001 and 2013. She currently works as a Consultant in Public Health Medicine at the Directorate for Health Information and Research and is a resident academic at the University of Malta. Her main research interests are European health policy and health systems in small states. She has authored several publications on these topics.

CLARE BAMBRA, UNITED KINGDOM Clare Bambra is Professor of Public Health at Newcastle University. Her research examines the political, social and economic determinants of health; and how public policies and interventions can reduce health inequalities. She is the Associate Director for Health Inequalities in Fuse, Centre for Translational Research in Public Health, and an Executive member of the NIHR School for Public Health Research. She holds a Leverhulme Research Leadership Award which examines Local Health Inequalities in an Age of Austerity and she is the Principal Investigator on the Norface funded grant 'HiNEWS' which examines health inequalities in Europe with partners in Norway, USA and Germany. She is also a collaborator on the ESRC Rethinking Incapacity project. She works closely with public health policy and practice and is currently the co-Director of the Equal North - Research and Practice Network in partnership with Public Health England.

RAFAEL BENGOA, SPAIN Rafael Bengoa is a medical doctor specialized in PHC and Community Medicine. He worked as a PHC doctor for ten years. Until recently he was Director of the Department of Health System Policies and Operations in the World Health Organization, Geneva. Dr Bengoa has worked for The World Bank as a consultant and for WHO at several levels. Before joining WHO, Dr Bengoa was responsible for running health services in the Basque Country Region of Spain and has been responsible for producing several policy reports on health care reform and public health to the Spanish Parliament. Dr Bengoa is visiting lecturer in Universities in Spain (Madrid and Barcelona) and is Honorary Fellow of the University of Manchester, UK. His main technical interest is connecting medicine and public health agendas.

ANNA CICHOWSKA MYRUP, WHO REGIONAL OFFICE FOR EUROPE Dr Anna Cichowska Myrup is a medically trained public health specialist, with a special interest in public health leadership development. Anna is currently leading the WHO Regional Office Programme on Public Health Services, part of the Division of Health Systems and Public Health. The Programme supports WHO Member States, within the European Region, in their reforms of public health services, focusing on development of public health workforce, organization and financing for public health services, and public health legislation. She is the co-founder of the Coalition of Partners to Strengthen Public health Service sin the European Region. Anna holds a medical degree from Maastricht University (The Netherlands) and a Masters degree in Public Health from Edinburgh University (Scotland, UK). She completed her public health specialization in the UK and is a fellow of the UK Faculty of Public Health.

CAROLINE COSTONGS, EUROHEALTHNET Caroline Costongs is Managing Director of EuroHealthNet, a European Partnership for improving health, equity and wellbeing, based in Brussels (www.eurohealthnet.eu). Caroline has an MSc in Public Health from the University of Maastricht (The Netherlands) and her main work focuses on policy, advocacy, research and capacity building in the field of health inequalities, health promotion across the life course, sustainable development and "Health in all Policies". She is a Board member of APHEA (Public Health Accreditation Agency) and member of the International Council for the European Public Health Conference. Caroline has also worked at The Netherlands Olympic Committee and Sports Confederation (NOC*NSF) on physical activity promotion for young people. Before that, she was active at the Health Institute of the Liverpool John Moores University where she did research on healthy public policies in cities and at the National Capacity Building Institute (INICE) of the Honduras Ministry of Education.

9 PLENARY SPEAKERS KATARZYNA CZABANOWSKA, THE NETHERLANDS Katarzyna Czabanowska is the President of the Association of the Schools of Public Health in European Region (ASPHER) and associate professor at the International Health Department, Maastricht University, The Netherlands. She directs Governance and Leadership in European Public Health programme. Her research focus is on public health workforce development and professionalization, public health leadership, women leadership in health care and competence-based education in public health. She holds honorary positions at: Jagiellonian University Medical College, Krakow, Poland and the University of Sheffield and the IU Richard M. Fairbanks School of Public Health, Indiana, and the US. In 2015 she won the Polish Person 2015 in The Netherlands Award in the category Science and Technique. She is the President of the EUPHA Working Group on Public Health Leadership.

KARL EKDAHL, ECDC Karl Ekdahl is head of the Public Health Capacity and Communication Unit at the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control (ECDC). He is a specialist in infectious diseases. Prior to joining ECDC in 2005 he was Deputy State Epidemiologist for Sweden. At ECDC he has held various positions including that of acting Director. In 2007, he was appointed Adjunct Professor in Infectious Disease Epidemiology at the Karolinska Institutet in Stockholm. He is also the former Editor-in-Chief of the scientific journal Eurosurveillance, published by ECDC

IVAN ERZEN, SLOVENIA During his long career, Ivan Eržen, MD, PhD, a specialist in public health, was performing a variety of tasks within public health in Slovenia, both at the regional and national level. In addition to his professional and research work, where he focused primarily on the study of health, in conjunction with health determinants, he devoted a lot of time to the students while teaching public health at different levels of education. Through education and his publications he hopes to transfer knowledge and experience in the field of public health to the young generation and to his fellow colleagues as well. He is full professor of public health at the University of Ljubljana but he is holding lectures in public health at different universities in Slovenia. Since September 2013, he is director of the National Institute of Public Health (NIJZ) in Slovenia.

KARL FALKENBERG, ADVISER EUROPEAN COMMISSION Karl Falkenberg is Senior Adviser to the European Political Strategy Centre (EPSC), think-tank of the European Commission, dealing with sustainable development. Being an economist and journalist by training, he joined the European Commission in 1977, working over 30 years in trade policy. He has comprehensive trade negotiating experience, both in multilateral and bilateral or regional contexts. From 2008 to 2015 he was Director General for Environment of the EU Commission. In June 2015 he was appointed Special Adviser to the President of the Commission for Sustainability. He produced a Report on the issue entitled 'Sustainability Now'. From October 2016 to June 2017 he was a Senior Fellow at St Antony's College, Oxford, United Kingdom. Karl Falkenberg has retired from the Commission on 1 July 2017.

JOSEP FIGUERAS, WHO REGIONAL OFFICE FOR EUROPE Josep Figueras is the Director of the European Observatory on Health Systems and Policies and head of the WHO European Centre on Health Policy in Brussels. In addition to WHO, he has served other major multilateral organisations such as the European Commission and the World Bank. He is a member of several advisory and editorial boards and has served as advisor in more than forty countries within the European region and beyond. He is honorary fellow of the UK Faculty of Public Health, has twice been awarded the EHMA prize, and in 2006 received the Andrija Stampar Medal. He was head of the MSc in Health Services Management at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine and he is currently visiting professor at Imperial College, London. His research focuses on comparative health system and policy analysis.

10 BIRGER FORSBERG, SWEDEN Birger Forsberg is Chair of the 10th EPH Conference in Stockholm. In normal life, he is head of the Health Development at the Stockholm County Council, covering public health and health services for a population of 2.2m people. He is also Associate Professor in International/Global Health at Karolinska Institutet. He has work experience from more than 25 countries as a staff member with WHO and consultant to international organisations. For the World Bank he worked on the interaction between the public and private sector in health services in various contexts and countries. He has a long experience on health care planning and evaluation in Swedish health services. Since 2007 he was engaged in work on resource allocations models for prevention of HIV/AIDS in Sweden under contracts from the Public Health Agency of Sweden.

ELINA HEMMINKI, FINLAND Elina Hemminki is a research professor emerita in the Finnish National Institute for Health and Welfare (THL). She is also adjunct professor in public health in Helsinki and Tampere Universities. She has a doctoral degree in public health. She has wide research experience in health services, health technology and epidemiological research, including international comparisons. She has published widely, including 456 articles or editorials in scientific journals or books and 137 other articles or book chapters. She has led a number of research projects and participated in global research projects, a.o. in Mozambique and China. Her research interests include determinants and consequences of medical technology, research policy and maternity care. A methodology she has been interested in is health services trials, and how ethical and governance rules apply to them.

QUDSIA HUDA, WORLD HEALTH ORGANIZATION Qudsia Huda is currently leading the Health Emergency Preparedness and Operational Readiness program based in WHO Headquarters. She has performed leadership roles in various major emergencies and humanitarian response operations around the world, including earthquakes in Iran, the South Asian tsunami and earthquake and disasters in Afghanistan, Libya, Yemen, Palestine, Somalia and Syria. With 20 years’ working experience she has led several research initiatives on emergencies and authored books and articles on various aspects of disaster management, specially focusing in the health sector. A Bangladeshi national, Qudsia Huda is a physician by training from Faculty of Medicine of Dhaka University (Bangladesh), and pursued her Masters and post graduations in Harvard University (USA), Tuft University, Massachusetts Institute of Technology (USA) and University of Leeds (UK).

CAITY JACKSON, WOMEN FOR GLOBAL HEALTH Caity Jackson (BHSc, MSc) is the Co-Founder and Director of Communications for Women in Global Health (WGH), a global movement that brings together all genders and backgrounds to achieve gender equality in global health leadership. WGH creates a platform for discussions and collaborative space for leadership, facilitates specific education and training. Caity has a decade of experience in global health education and communication, specializing in young professional and leadership development. She works with clients around the globe alongside higher education institutions, NGOs, and the private sector. She was recently named one of the top 300 Women Leaders in Global Health by the Graduate Institute in Geneva. She is also a Founder and Past Chair of the annual Global Health Student & Young Professional Summit (Canadian), and a founding member of the Canadian Society for International Health's (CSIH) MentorNet mentorship programme.

HOLLY JARMAN, UNITED STATES Holly Jarman is the John G. Searle Assistant Professor within the Department of Health Management and Policy at the University of Michigan School of Public Health. As a political scientist, she researches the impact of trade agreements and economic regulations on domestic health and social policies, with a focus on the United States and European Union. Her work has been published in journals which include the Journal of Public Health Policy, Tobacco Control, and Public Policy and Administration. Her book, The Politics of Trade and Tobacco Control, published by Palgrave Macmillan press, explores the consequences of trade law for tobacco control policies.

11 PLENARY SPEAKERS AGNETA , SWEDEN Agneta Karlsson is State Secretary to the Minister for Health Care, Public Health and Sport since 2014. She has spent most of her professional life within the public sector. She started her career as political adviser in the Prime Minister’s Officer. After spells at the Stockholm City Council and the Swedish Trade Union Confederation, she served as State Secretary for the Minister of Health (2002-03) and State Secretary for the Minister of Education (2004-06). Between 2006 and 2014 she worked within the private sector, first with GlaxoSmithKline (GSK) and later with Arenagruppen. She holds a degree in public administration and organisational theory from Stockholm University and a degree from Scandinavian’s oldest school of journalism, the Poppius School of Journalism.

HANS KLUGE, WHO REGIONAL OFFICE FOR EUROPE Hans Kluge is a Belgian trained medical doctor holding a Diploma degree in public health. He has a wealth of country and manage- ment experience spanning several WHO Regions with a background in health systems, public health and infectious diseases, including in Somalia, Liberia, Myanmar, Russia, Central Asia and Caucasus. Hans Kluge moved to the WHO Regional Office in Copenhagen in 2009 as head of Country Policies and Systems and has worked as Special Representative to Combat MDR-TB in the European Region. In 2010, he became Director, Division of Health Systems and Public Health. He received an Award from the Russian government for his efforts in combating TB and HIV in the Russian penitentiary system. He is Associate Editor of the International Journal of Integrated Care and published in the field of TB, public health and on the impact of the economic crisis on health system performance in Europe.

CAROLINA KLUFT, SWEDEN Carolina Klüft is a former athlete with one Olympic gold in heptathlon as her major title. Carolina now works with different projects. One of them is Generation Pep. Generation Pep is a non-profit organisation initiated by the Swedish Crown Princess Couple, with the vision that all children and young people in Sweden should have the ability and desire to live an active and healthy life. To have a chance to succeed with this long term vision, Generation Pep wants to involve the whole community in the work - from local enthusiasts to politicians and policymakers. Beside the work at Generation Pep Carolina does lectures, has written a book, works with television and other smaller projects. Her main focus is to work with sustainable societies and personal development.

TARU KOIVISTO, FINLAND Taru Koivisto is Director at the Ministry of Social Affairs and Health, Finland. Her area of responsibilities covers promotion on health, wellbeing and functional capacity, public health, including NCDs and communicable diseases, rehabilitation and services for the elderly. She has long experience in public health and has been involved both nationally and internationally in a number of committees, conferences and advisory groups. She has served as the chairperson of the Council of Europe’s health committees and chair of the Standing Committee of the Regional Committee for WHO/EURO. Her unit was responsible for the 8th WHO Global Conference on Health Promotion in 2013 in Helsinki. She has worked in the Ministry since 1998 and before that in other positions in national health administration since 1989.

GAETAN LAFORTUNE, OECD Gaetan Lafortune is a Senior Economist in the OECD Health Division. Over the past ten years, Mr. Lafortune has acted as the coordinator and editor of the OECD publication Health at a Glance, which presents international comparisons of health and health systems across European and non-European countries. He has also carried out a number of research projects on the measurement of health inequalities and health workforce issues. Before joining the OECD, Gaetan Lafortune worked on a range of labour market and health policy issues for the Government of Canada in Ottawa. Gaetan Lafortune holds a Master’s Degree in Economics from the University of Sherbrooke (Canada).

12 DOMINIQUE MONNET, ECDC Dominique Monnet is head Antimicrobial Resistance & Healthcare-Associated (ARHAI) at the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control (ECDC). He joined ECDC in 2007 to lead ECDC’s Disease Programme on Antimicrobial Resistance and Healthcare-Associated Infections. He is also representing ECDC in the EU-US Transatlantic Task Force on Antimicrobial Resistance (TATFAR). Before joining ECDC, he worked in French , at the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (1993-1995) and at the Danish Statens Serum Institut (1997-2007). His research interests include surveillance of antimicrobial resistance and antimicrobial consumption, the relationship between consumption of antimicrobials and resistance, and the factors that affect antimicrobial usage, both in hospitals and in primary care.

AARON REEVES, UNITED KINGDOM Aaron Reeves is an Associate Professorial Research Fellow in the International Inequalities Institute at the London School of Economics (LSE). Before joining the LSE, he was a Senior Research Fellow in the Department of Sociology at the University of Oxford. He is a sociologist with interests in public health, culture, and political economy. His work involves examining the causes and consequences of social, economic, and cultural inequity in Europe and North America.

WALTER RICCIARDI, ITALY Walter Ricciardi is President of the Italian National Institute of Health (ISS) and Past-President of the European Public Health Association (EUPHA). As Professor of Hygiene and Public Health at the Catholic University of the Sacred Heart in Rome he manages undergraduate and postgraduate teaching activities including a Master of Science programme and International Courses in Epidemiology. Since 2013 he serves as Member of the EU Expert Panel on Effective Ways of Investing in Health. From 2011 to 2014 he was Member of National Board of Medical Examiners of the United States of America. In 2015, he was appointed Director of the WHO Collaborating Centre for Health Policy, Governance and Leadership at the Catholic University of the Sacred Heart. He is Editor of several leading journals: the European Journal of Public Health, the Oxford Handbook of Public Health Practice and Founding Editor of the Italian Journal of Public Health and of Epidemiology, Biostatistics and Public Health.

OLA ROSLING, SWEDEN Ola Rosling is CEO and Co-Founder of Gapminder Foundation which he founded together with his father Hans Rosling and his wife Anna Rosling Rönnlund. Since 1999 Ola is leading the development of the Trendalyzer software, which was acquired by Google in 2007 where Anna and Ola turned it into the Google Motion Chart. As Product Manager for Google Public Data Ola democratised access to public statistics by integrating official statistical sources into Google Search results by introducing Data Set Publishing Language (DSPL). Ola then went back to Gapminder to develop free teaching materials. He initiated the Ignorance Project in 2013, to measure the widespread lack of knowledge of basic global facts.

ANNA SARKADI, SWEDEN Anna Sarkadi is professor of social medicine at the Department of Public Health & Caring Sciences at Uppsala University, Sweden. Born and raised in Budapest, Hungary she moved to Sweden in 1995. She became MD and PhD in Uppsala in 2001. She conducted her postdoc at the Royal Children’s Hospital in Melbourne where she is still an honorary research fellow. Her research area is within social paediatrics, specifically focusing on parenting support and societal interventions to prevent mental health problems in children. Her research is primarily applied, with intervention studies as her main expertise. She is also involved in quality improvement of universal child health services. Anna Sarkadi is head of the research group Child Heath and Parenting (CHAP). During the influx of minor asylum seekers in 2015, CHAP initiated research on this vulnerable group, comprising epidemiological and intervention studies on post-traumatic stress symptoms.

13 PLENARY SPEAKERS DARREN SHICKLE, UNITED KINGDOM Darren Shickle is Professor of Public Health at University of Leeds and Honorary Consultant within Public Health England. Darren has been at Leeds since 2005. He was previously Clinical Reader in Public Health at the University of Sheffield. In 2003/4 he was seconded to the Department of Health in London as a Senior Medical Officer within the Scientific Developments and Bioethics Division. Since 2003 he has been an ethics reviewer for the European Commission. In 1996/7 he was a Harkness Fellow based at the Johns Hopkins School of Public Health in Baltimore and Georgetown University, Washington DC and also worked at the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. Darren’s main current specialist interest is public health leadership and workforce development. His other ongoing interests include ophthalmic public health and public health ethics. He has research links with various European countries, New Zealand, Hong Kong, United States of America, and Canada.

CLAUDIA STEIN, WHO REGIONAL OFFICE FOR EUROPE Claudia Stein MD, MSc, PhD, FFPH is a German trained public health physician, epidemiologist and director with the World Health Organi­za­tion (WHO). Claudia qualified from Essen University Medical School in Germany in 1989. She has post-graduate training in , a Master's in Public Health, a PhD in Epidemiology and completed a residency in Public Health Medicine with Specialist Certific­tion. Prior to her career at WHO she worked as public health physician and epidemiologist at country level in Europe, as well as for a few years in India and China, the latter two under the auspices of the Medical Research Council, MRC. Claudia first joined WHO in 1998, as a secondment from the United Kingdom. Claudia mainly in the area of health information, statistics and burden of disease. In 2010, Claudia took up her current position as Director of Information, Evidence and Research at the WHO European headquarters in Copenhagen.

AURA TIMEN, PRESIDENT EUPHA SECTION ON INFECTIOUS DISEASES CONTROL Aura Timen received a medical degree from the University of Medicine and Pharmacy in Cluj-Napoca, Rumania in 1991 and from the Free University (VU) of Amsterdam, The Netherlands in 1995. She registered as specialist in community medicine with the Royal Society of Medicine of The Netherlands (1999) and as specialist in communicable disease control (2000). She is head of the National Coordination Centre for Communicable Disease Control (LCI), which is part of the Centre for Infectious Disease Control of the National Institute for Public Health and the Environment (RIVM). Aura Timen holds a PhD in outbreak management from the Radboud University Nijmegen, The Netherlands. She has participated in various international projects aiming to strengthen the capacity to respond to epidemics. In November 2012 she became president of the EUPHA section on Infectious Diseases Control.

ANDRE VAN DER ZANDE, THE NETHERLANDS André van der Zande is Director-General at the National Institute for Public Health and the Environment (RIVM), The Netherlands. He has held this position since 2011. André van der Zande studied biology at Leiden University and was awarded his PhD from the same university on the subject disturbance by recreation of breeding bird population. From 1982 until 1996 he worked in the field of nature conservation, with the Province of Gelderland, the State Forestry Service, and the Ministry for Agriculture, Nature and Food Quality. He was a part-time professor of Spatial Planning and Cultural History at Wageningen University (2005-2009). In 2002, he returned to the Ministry of Agriculture, Nature and Food Quality. From 2007 until his appointment at RIVM, he was Director-General and later Secretary-General at the Ministry and his responsibilities included agricultural policy, nature and biodiversity and general environmental policy.

14 JAAP VAN DISSEL, THE NETHERLANDS Jaap van Dissel is Director of the Centre for Infectious Disease Control at the National Institute for Public Health and the Environment (RIVM), The Netherlands. After specialising in internal medicine and infectious diseases at Leiden University (LUMC), he became NWO-Talent fellow at Duke University Medical Center and Cold Spring Harbor laboratories. In 1999, he was appointed Professor of Medicine and head of the Department of Infectious Diseases at LUMC. Research activities include immunogenetic studies on host-pathogen interactions, exploratory vaccine trials, and biomarker studies in infectious disease. He was vice-chair of the Dutch Medicine Evaluation Board and SAG Anti-infectives of EMA in London, and member of the Medicine Litigation Court and Dutch Health Council. Next to his duties at RIVM, he continues to work part-time in clinical patient care at LUMC.

MARGARETA WAHLSTROM, SWEDEN Margareta Wahlström is former Special Representative of the UN Secretary General for Disaster Risk Reduction and, currently, President of the Swedish Red Cross. Margareta Wahlström has 35 years of extensive experience in both disaster relief operations and disaster risk management, in development and political work with the United Nations system, the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies, and the private sector. Between 2009 and 2015, Margareta Wahlström was the Special Representative of the UN Secretary General for Disaster Risk Reduction. She also served as Deputy UN Emergency Relief Coordinator in UNOCHA, and prior to this as Deputy Special Representative of the UN Secretary General in UNAMA Afghanistan. In May 2017, she was elected as President of the Swedish Red Cross Society.

DINEKE ZEEGERS PAGET, EUPHA Dineke Zeegers Paget is the Executive Director of EUPHA - the European Public Health Association – a network of national public health associations aimed at voicing knowledge and capacity building. She has a law degree, followed by a PhD on comparing AIDS legislation in the world (1996). Before starting to work at EUPHA in 1997, she worked at the World Health Organization HQ and the University of Groningen where she worked on legal issues and human rights related to AIDS. Between 1992 and 1997, she worked at the Swiss Federal Ministry of Public Health, as a coordinator of AIDS projects in specific target groups and health promotion in prisons.

ERIO ZIGLIO, FORMER WHO REGIONAL OFFICE FOR EUROPE Erio Ziglio has worked with the World Health Organization (WHO) for more than 20 years. At WHO Regional Office for Europe he was responsible for the Health Promotion and Investment Programme. In 2003 he was appointed as Head of the European Office for Investment for Health and Development until his retirement in 2014. He is currently Honorary Professor at the University of Applied Sciences, Tyrol, Austria and Guest Lecturer at the Management Centre, Innsbruck, Austria. He has lectured internationally and published widely on the subjects of health promotion, health policy and planning, futures research, social determinants of health, health inequities and population health in sustainable development.

15 16 Wednesday 1 November PRE-CONFERENCES PRE-CONFERENCES TIME, LOCATION AND ORGANISER PRE-CONFERENCES WEDNESDAY 1th NOVEMBER Wed 1st Mental health and architecture (ARCH) 9:00-17:00 Chair person (s): Jutta Lindert – EUPHA Section on Public mental health, Stefano Capolongo – Italy

Room T5 Literature review on urban design and mental health, Daniela D’Alessandro, Lorenzo Capasso - Italy Case studies on green areas and mental health, Catharine Ward Thompson - United Kingdom EUPHA (PMH) (URB) (ENV) and Urban sprawl and mental health, Alessandra Casuccio - Italy Politecnico Milano Shrinking cities and regions and health risks, speaker tbc Architecture as generator of health and wellbeing, Stefano Capolongo - Italy, Andrea Rebecchi - Italy Implementing international multidisciplinary collaboration for built environment, safety and usability Jim Chauvin - Canada, Carlo Signorelli – Italy Literature review on built environment and resilience, Jutta Lindert - EUPHA (MEN) Built environment and health inequalities, Giuseppe Costa - Italy Building codes and mental health, Jake Pauls - Canada, Carlo Signorelli - Italy Outlook, Gaetano Maria Fara - Italy

Wed 1st Child maltreatment: a public health perspective. Half way to 2020, where are we now? (CAPH) 9:00-13:30 Welcome, Introduction to a pre-conference workshop, Ulugbek Nurmatov and Danielle Jansen – EUPHA (CAPH) Room T3 Delivering the evidence base behind child maltreatment for health professionals, Alison Kemp – United Kingdom The European Child Maltreatment Prevention Action Plan, Dinesh Sethi - WHO EUPHA (CAPH) (PMH) (INJ) and Privacy-protecting data linkage in evaluation, Ronan Lyons - United Kingdom the National Centre for Population Improving data collection on child maltreatment across health and social care Health and Wellbeing Research Lorraine Radford – United Kingdom Implementation of Incredible Years in Norway, Bjorn Brunborg – Norway BarnSäkert: a cluster-randomized controlled trial of the Safe Environment for Every Kid (SEEK) model in the Swedish preventive child health services, Steven Lucas – Sweden

Wed 1st The Nordic Welfare Systems: common elements and current challenges for public health (NOWS) 9:00-13:30 Welcome and introduction, Anna Sarkadi - Sweden Room T6 International perspective on the Nordic Welfare and Health Systems, Johan Mackenbach - The Netherlands Challenges for Public Health in Finland, Elina Hemminki - Finland Nordic Welfare Centre Social inequalities in health in Norway from an international perspective: Evidence from the ESS Health Module, Terje Eikemo - Norway Public health in Iceland, Sigríður Kristín Hrafnkelsdóttir - Iceland The Danish Public Health System – Fact or Fiction? Maja Bertram - Denmark Choice reforms and equity in , Bo Burström - Sweden Closing, Anna Sarkadi – Sweden

17 TIME, LOCATION AND ORGANISER PRE-CONFERENCES WEDNESDAY 1th NOVEMBER Wed 1st Health literacy and the resilient citizen in the healthy community: filling the gap between 9:00-13:30 theory and health promotion research in the sustainability agenda (HPRO) Chair person(s): Luis Saboga Nunes, EUPHA (HP), Bruun Jenssen, IUHPE Europe, Orkan Okan, Room T4 Health Literacy in Childhood and Adolescence Research Consortium (HLCA)

EUPHA (HP) (CAPH), Overarching principles for health promotion in practice? Bruun Jenssen – IUHPE Europe Bielefeld University (CPI), HLCA The fragmentation of HP-research seen from a young health promotion researcher’s view Unni Karin Moksnes - Norway Better health promotion through taking action on health inequalities and improving health equity Peter Goldblatt – United Kingdom Improving health literacy to take action on health equity, Kristine Sørensen - Denmark Health literacy in child and adolescent populations, Paulo Pinheiro - Germany PRE-CONFERENCES Mental health literacy: systems and providers, Ullrich Bauer - Germany Wednesday 1 November Wednesday E-health literacy and Digital Health, Uwe H. Bittlingmayer - Germany Assessing health information literacy by knowledge tests, Ann-Kathrin Mayer - Germany Health literacy in a life course perspective - challenges and potentials in health promotion, prevention and treatment, Helle Terkildsen Maindal - Denmark Wishes and improving health literacy in childhood and adolescents, Elise Sijthoff and Shanti Georges Baseline health literacy awareness level on signs and symptoms of endemic Infectious diseases amongst secondary school students in Boyo division of Cameroon: A discrete choice empirical study in a local community, Kenneth Yongabi Anchang - Cameroon

Wed 1st A sustainable people-centred health workforce in Europe: how to make change happen? 9:00-17:00 (HWFD)

Room K24 Panellists: Hans Kluge - WHO EURO EUPHA (HWR proposed), Josep Figueras - Observatory Observatory, OECD and WHO Gaetan Lafortune - OECD Natasha Azzopardi-Muscat - EUPHA

Health workforce education: new approaches David Smith - International Network for Health Workforce Education (INHWE) Fostering the utilisation of available knowledge and evidence in the policy development and implementation process, Gilles Dussault - Identifying and evaluating team skills required for integrated and people-centred care, Akiko Maeda - OECD Health workforce planning from a skill-mix perspective, Ronald Batenburg - The Netherlands Reform strategies and skill-mix innovation, Matthias Wismar, Irene A. Glinos - Observatory Stakeholder involvement as facilitator of an integrated health workforce Ellen Kuhlmann – Germany and Viola Burau - Denmark Connecting health and social care: the ‘Ageing at Home’ project in Norway, Walter Schönfelder - Norway Health workforce needs in Serbia, Milena Santric Milicevic - Serbia Health workforce needs in Romania, Marius Ungureanu - Romania

18 TIME, LOCATION AND ORGANISER PRE-CONFERENCES WEDNESDAY 1th NOVEMBER Wednesday 1 November Wed 1st

Sharing health information and evidence with policy makers: tools for transferring PRE-CONFERENCES 9:00-17:00 knowledge into policy action (PHMR)

Room K21, K22 Programme available online and App

EUPHA (PHMR), CHAFEA

Wed 1st Waterloo or Mamma Mia? Implementation of innovations in public health policy 9:00-17:00 and practice (PHPP)

Room K12 Programme available online and App

EUPHA (PHPP), CHAFEA, EIC

Wed 1st Planetary Health in Practice (PLAN) 9:00-17:00 Long term evolution of humanity's influence on planetary health,Mark Maslin - United Kingdom Room K15 Session 1: Understanding air pollution impacts on health: from household to global risks Stockholm Environment and solutions Institute (SEI) Moderator: Mare Löhmus Sundström - Sweden

Challenges to reducing indoor air pollution, Caroline Ochieng - Sweden Short and long-term impacts of air pollution, Lars Barregård – Sweden (TBC) Urban health through a shift to fossil-free transport, Mattias Goldman - Sweden

Session 2: High and Dry: Changing climate, water, and health,

Climate, water and infectious diseases, Jan Semenza - ECDC Climate change vulnerability of water and sanitation systems in low-income countries, Sarah Dickin - Sweden Climate change a threat to Sweden's drinking water, Per-Erik Nystrom - Sweden (TBC) From research to practice: Integrated drinking water solutions to build resilience Ngolia Kimanzu - Salvation Army

Session 3: A changing planet with unequal impacts for nutrition, food and child and maternal health

Women, children and the food environment in Addis Ababa, Eva-Charlotte Ekström - Sweden Determinants and consequences of obesity in preschool age, Paulina Nowicka - Sweden Diet for a Green Planet, Sara Jervfors - Sweden

Policy panel: Bringing science to policy and practice on the pathway to 2030 Cecilia Scharp – Sweden (TBC) Anders Nordström, Sweden Göran Tomson, Sweden Nighisty Ghezae, Sweden

19 TIME, LOCATION AND ORGANISER PRE-CONFERENCES WEDNESDAY 1th NOVEMBER ed 1st Application of a human rights based approach to health policy, planning and practice: 9:00-17:00 will it improve access and quality of care? Obstacles, opportunities and success stories from the global world Room K11 Moderator: Henry Asher, Sweden

SIDA, DG DEVCO Welcome - Carin Jämtin, Sweden, Kevin McCarthy, DG DEVCO

Session 1: Health and human rights nexus: opportunities and challenges from past to present

The human right to health: what it means and why it matter - Gorik Ooms, United Kingdom Public health, medicine, human rights and right to health

PRE-CONFERENCES Dainius Puras, UN Special Rapporteur on the Right to Health Human rights and health - the contribution of the human rights to water and sanitation Wednesday 1 November Wednesday Catarina de Albuquerque, Sanitation and Water for All Global Partnership

Session 2: Applying a human-rights based approach to health: politics, policy and practice

Empowering and equipping people to make more healthy choices– closing the equity gap Anders Nordström, Sweden Human rights, accountability and global health: the SDGs and beyond - Alicia Yamin, USA Health workers’ perception and perspectives of a human rights based approach to health Gunilla Backman, United Kingdom

Human rights based approach to health in practice: examples from the field

HIV - Martha Tholana, Zimbabwe Mental health - Nicola Browne, United Kingdom SRHR- Reproductive Rights - Sara Garcia, El Salvador (tbc) Maternal and Child health Henry Asher, Sweden Water and Sanitation - Catarina de Albuquerque, Sanitation and Water for All Global Partnership Universal Health Coverage - Kevin McCarthy DG DEVCO and Alicia Yamin, USA

Concluding reflections: how to move forward

Dainius Puras, UN Special Rapporteur on the Right to Health Maria Neira, WHO Wed 1st Challenges when designing SSWH intervention studies (SSWH) 9:00-17:00 Welcome and introduction Gunnel Hensing, EUPHA Section of Social Security, Work & Health Room K16 Intervention studies in the Primary Health Care: What can the field of SSWH learn regarding study design? EUPHA (SSWH) Simon Gilbody – United Kingdom Interventions to reduce sickness absence with common mental disorders in Primary Health Care Centers Cecilia Björkelund - Sweden Long-term effects on work participation of work-focused Cognitive Behavioral and individual job support, Simon Øverland - Norway

20 TIME, LOCATION AND ORGANISER PRE-CONFERENCES WEDNESDAY 1th NOVEMBER Wednesday 1 November Wed 1st How to write for and publish in a public health journal (WRIT) PRE-CONFERENCES 9:00-17:00 Faculty: Room K23 Giuseppe La Torre, Associate Editor Public Health Alastair Leyland, Editor European Journal of Public Health EUPHAnxt and EUPHA (EPI) EUPHAnext members

Wed 1st Fostering health services and systems research in future research programmes (HSR) 12:30-17:00 Programme available online and App Room K13, K14

TO-REACH consortium, EUPHA (HSR) and HSR Europe

Wed 1st Healthy meals: a way to environmental, economic and social sustainability? (FOOD) 12:30-17:00 Chair person(s): Natalie Rangelov - EUPHA (FN)

Room T3 Food production and climate impact, Elin Röös - Sweden Economic and environmental costs of food waste, Mattias Eriksson – Sweden EUPHA (FN), Swedish National Changing the conditions to enable sustainable diets to be normal, Tim Lang – United Kingdom Network for Good Food Habits From strategic to operational goals; Ghent’s sustainable food policy, Katrien Verbeke - Belgium How sustainable are Swedish school meals? Emma Patterson - Sweden Policy recommendations and roadmap for action locally, nationally and globally, Amanda Wood - Sweden Food, health and equality from an Agenda 2030 perspective, Annica Sohlström - Sweden

Wed 1st Health technology assessments: Systematic review including economic, social and ethical 12:30-17:00 analyses (HTA) Chair person(s): Pia Johansson - Sweden Room T6 Presenters: SBU, Sweden Maja Kärrman Fredriksson - Sweden Anna Christensson - Sweden Göran Bertilson - Sweden Pia Johansson - Sweden Emelie Heintz - Sweden

21 TIME, LOCATION AND ORGANISER PRE-CONFERENCES WEDNESDAY 1th NOVEMBER Wed 1st INHERIT - environmental sustainability, health, equity and behaviour change 12:30-17:00 Chair person(s): Caroline Costongs - EuroHealthNet

Room T1 Session one: Why INHERIT? Setting the Scene: the need for integrated responses to pressing societal challenges, Harry Rutter – United Kingdom INHERIT project consortium, Introducing the INHERIT and the promising practices and pilot studies EuroHealthNet Ingrid Stegeman and Monica Åberg Yngwe - EuroHealthNet

Session two: The way forward Future scenarios and how can we get there – policy options, Kristina Modée - Germany

PRE-CONFERENCES Session three: Modeling a more integrated approach to change Introduction to and application of the INHERIT Common Analytical Framework (CAF) Wednesday 1 November Wednesday Brigit Staatsen - The Netherlands

Session four: Implementing and learning from the INHERIT pilots Working across sectors – health and environment, Geir A Espnes - Norway Reaching the more and most vulnerable: designing for and evaluating impact on health equity Ruth Bell - United Kingdom Cost-benefit evaluations –approaches and effects, Aline Chiabai - Spain Wed 1st To achieve gender equality – the importance of reaching young men (PHAS) 12:30-17:00 Introductory presentation, Sven Bremberg - Sweden Room T2 Theoretical section that puts the subject "on the map" – about masculinity in general, how it may have changed and how this may affect men's health, Anna Månsdotter - Sweden Public Health Agency of Sweden Masculinity norms and suicide, Lars Jalmert – Sweden Violence – violence and discrimination among LGBT people in all 27 EU member states related to legislation and acceptance of LGBT people, Richard Bränström - Sweden National population survey – among 16–29 years of age on sexuality and health – Aspects of equality and a norm-critical perspective on sexually transmitted infections, sexual assault, sex-for-pay and knowledge, information and access to health and medical care, Anna-Chuchu Schindele - Sweden Gaming, alcohol, young men and masculinity, Jessika Spångberg - Sweden

Panel discussion Wed 1st Opportunities and challenges arising from European Integration for Health Systems 12:30-17:00 in Small States (SMSH)

Room T4 Welcome, Roderick Pace - Malta, Helmut Brand - The Netherlands Why should we pay particular attention to the issues of small states? Natasha Azzopardi Muscat - Malta Small States and Health consortium Access to medicines in Small States, Gisella Orsini, Patricia Vella Bonanno, Natasha Azzopardi Muscat - Malta Issues of workforce mobility from the perspective of Small States, Ulla-Karin Nurm, Vootele Veldre - Estonia Organizing cancer care when the population and health workforce is small, Rade Pribakovic, Tit Albreht - Slovenia Small States and the management of rare diseases, Auður Birna Stefánsdóttir, Sigurbjorg Sigurgeirsdottir - Iceland The WHO/Europe Small countries initiative as platform for exchange, Francesco Zambon - WHO EURO

Panel discussion

22 TIME, LOCATION AND ORGANISER PRE-CONFERENCES WEDNESDAY 1th NOVEMBER Wednesday 1 November Wed 1st ASPHER Young Researchers’ Forum (YRF) PRE-CONFERENCES 12:30-17:00 Chairs: Kasia Czabanowska - ASPHER, Laurent Chambaud – ASPHER, Nino Künzli - ASPHER

Room K2 Oral presentations: Deliberate self-harm among the homeless population in Ireland: a national registry-based study ASPHER of incidence and associated factors, Peter Barrett - Ireland Time trends in prevalence and incidence rates of childhood overweight and obesity in Portugal: Generation XXI birth cohort, Ana Isabel Freitas - Portugal Fruit and vegetable intake among urban Palestinians and Israelis - A cross sectional study Tamara Huseini - Israel Prevalence of food insecurity and associated socio-demographic characteristics in young adults: evidence from a Portuguese population-based sample, Isabel Maia - Portugal Socioeconomic status, sleep and cardiometabolic disorders: pooled analyses from six European cohorts, Dusan Petrovic- Switzerland Social inequalities in lung function development from adolescence to early adulthood: the EPITeen cohort study, Vânia Rocha - Portugal Costs and effectiveness of influenza vaccination: a review, Silvia Rota - Italy The association between iron supplementation during pregnancy and childhood and anemia status among one to five year old children in India, Monica Thomas - Armenia Closing speech by 2017 Andrija Stampar Medallist, Elina Hemminki - Finland

Poster presentations: Stressors and coping strategies among general secondary students in governmental schools in North West Bank, Mariam AL-Tell - Palestine Sexting among adolescents: the bad scenario and the reactions . Yara Barrense-Dias- Switzerland The relationship between physical activity and mental health: results of a population level survey in Ireland, Andrea Bowe - Ireland Migrants and perinatal health: assessing equity in Mariana Carrapatoso - United Kingdom Association between the availability and affordability of medicines under the uniform price regulation policy in low- and lower-middle-income countries, Kateryna Chepynoga - Switzerland Support for evidence-based alcohol policy: results from the community action on alcohol pilot project in Ireland, Martin Davoren - Ireland Reproductive trajectories and social-biological dimensions in parenthood: findings from the validation of the Portuguese version of the meaning of parenthood scale, Ana Henriques - Portugal What do political parties in Croatia talk about when they talk about health? An unexpected follow-up Damir Ivankovic - Croatia Creating conditions of equality within public health deliberations, Jaime Jimenez-Pernett - Spain What are the conditions for decentralization to improve the public health system? Perspectives from key decision-makers in the Philippines after 25 years of decentralizing health services Harvy Joy Liwanag - Switzerland Measuring childhood obesity and obesogenic urban form at neighbourhood-level . A public health approach for prioritizing communities for obesity control, Ana Isabel Ribeiro - Portugal Using Facebook in a nutritional program for overweight underprivileged adolescents, Laura Saez - France Access to healthcare among drug users: utilization and barriers, André Tadeu – Portugal Individuals' motivation to undergo three types of cancer screening in Kazakhstan Alfiya Shamsutdinova -Kazakhstan

23 LUNCH SYMPOSIUMS

THURSDAY 2 NOVEMBER, 12:30-13:30 The results of this project, commissioned by A FRESH TAKE ON POLICY FOR the European Parliament and European PHARMACEUTICAL RESEARCH: ENSURING USING ONE HEALTH APPROACH TO Commission shall improve the prevention ACCESS TO MEDICAL INNOVATION AND COMBAT AMR and treatment of coronary heart disease in TACKLING MEDICAL GAPS Room K11 women and men throughout Europe. Room K16 With: Vera Regitz-Zagrosek , Institute of Organised by LIF, trade association for the Gender in Medicine, Charite University, Berlin Organised by the Federal Ministry of Health and research-based , Sweden Women’s Affairs, Austria FRIDAY 3 NOVEMBER, 12:15 - 13:15 Antimicrobial resistance (AMR) is a major In 2016, the EU’s Council of Ministers voiced public health issue. AMR – being a global SOCIAL IMPACT BONDS: DRIVING its concern over ‘an increasing number of problem of complex epidemiology – is well INNOVATION IN HEALTHCARE AND examples of market failures (…), where suited to a broad, integrated One Health SOCIAL SERVICES? patients’ access to effective and affordable approach. The One Health concept typically Room K11 essential medicines is endangered by very considers three environments: human, high price levels…’.The Austrian presidency animal, and physical. This lunch symposium Organised by Health Navigator, Sweden of the EU-Council in 2018 will address the will show how combatting AMR benefits difficulties that public health authorities from a One Health approach. Examples will Healthcare costs are spiralling throughout encounter when trying to ensure patients’ be presented from the responsible use of the industrialised world. To halt the process, access to innovative and high-quality antibiotics in both humans and animals, it has been proposed to shift from expensive , while at the same time ensure R&D into new antimicrobials, use of hospital care to early interventions and research in areas with therapeutic needs existing antimicrobials, new business models: preventive care and to move from payment and safeguarding the financial viability and the concept of ‘de-linking’, vaccines and for activities to payment for measurably sustainability of the health care system. immunization programmes, hygiene and improved health. Can Social Impact Bonds The symposium is targeted at policy makers sanitation, immune-system enhancing (SIBs) - that combine evidence based early and experts interested in pharmaceutical activities, communication and information intervention/prevention with outcome based and research policies. The session should dissemination contracts backed by private or other capital - give a first insight into the preparations for be a way forward? Health Navigator the upcoming Austrian Presidency of the GENDER DIFFERENCES IN CORONARY facilitated the first SIB in Sweden in 2016. EU-Council. ARTERY DISEASE IN EUROPE – Mutual benefits for investors and public With: Clemens-Martin Auer, Austrian Federal PRESENTATION OF FACTSHEETS health actors demonstrate that this type of Ministry of Health and Women’s Affairs; Room K16 financing is becoming increasingly popular. Suerie Moon, The Graduate Institute, Geneva/ With Joachim Werr, Health Navigator and Harvard T. H. Chan School of Public Health Organised by GenCAD consortium Johan Fredriksson, deputy CEO Frösunda (tbc). Moderator: Josep Figueras, European Omsorg Observatory on Health Systems and Policies The GenCAD consortium has produced factsheets for health professionals and the general public on gender differences in coronary heart disease and its prevention.

24 NOW FREELY AVAILABLE: ANNUAL REVIEW OF PUBLIC HEALTH

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25 JOIN THE NETWORKS ORGANISED BY EUPHA

EUPHA Sections are theme-specific networks that organise workshops and projects together. All EUPHA Sections are organising annual meetings during the conference programme. These meetings are open to all delegates, registration is not required. Please feel free to join.

Thursday 2 November, 12:00-13:15 Room K21 EUPHA (ENV) Environment related disease: Join the network Room K13 EUPHA (FN) Food and nutrition: Join the network Room K24 EUPHAnxt EUPHAnxt: Join the network Room K22 EUPHA (HSR) Health services research: Join the network Room K23 EUPHA (ECO) Public health economics: Join the network Room K16 EUPHA (PMH) Public mental health: Join the network Room K12 EUPHA (SSWH) Social security, work and health: Join the network Room K15 EUPHA (URB) Urban public health: Join the network

Friday 3 November, 12:10-13:40 Room T3 EUPHA (HPMR) Public health monitoring and reporting: Join the network Room T6 EUPHA (PHPP) Public health practice and policy: Join the network Room K24 EUPHA (CAPH) Child and adolescent public health: Join the network Room K22 EUPHA (CHR) Chronic diseases: Join the network Room T5 EUPHA (HIA) Health impact assessment: Join the network Room K15 EUPHA (HTA) Health technology assessment: Join the network Room K12 EUPHA (IDC) Infectious diseases control: Join the network Room K14 EUPHA (INJ) Injury prevention and safety promotion: Join the network Room K21 EUPHA (MIG) Migrant and ethnic minority health: Join the network Room T2 EUPHA (EPI) Public health epidemiology: Join the network Room T4 EUPHA (SGMH) Sexual and gender minority health: Join the network Room T1 EUPHA (HWR proposed) Health workforce research: Join the network Room M10 EUPHA (PHG) Public health genomics: Join the network Room K23 EUPHA (HP) Health promotion: Join the network

Saturday 4 November, 13:10-14:10 Room K11 EUPHA (ETH) Ethics in public health: Join the network

26 TIME, LOCATION TRACK PARALLEL SESSION 1

AND ORGANISER Thursday 2 November MAIN CONFERENCE Thu 2nd Communities 1.A. Workshop: Public Landscapes for Public Health 9:00-10:30 and Chairperson(s): George Morris - United Kingdom environment Room K11 Developing Scotland’s Natural Health Service – an example of innovative collaboration between the environment and health sectors in Scotland, Kevin Lafferty - United Kingdom OPENspace Improvements to Woods In and Around Towns: a natural experiment working with deprived communities Research centre Catharine Ward Thompson - United Kingdom From Green Space to Green prescriptions? Agnes van den Berg - The Netherlands Developing the Finnish model of Healthy Parks, Healthy People, Matti Tapaninen - Finland

Thu 2nd Public health 1.B. Round table: Upholding public health research, policy and practice in a future European 9:00-10:30 policy Union Chairperson(s): Dineke Zeegers Paget - EUPHA Room T3 Panel: EUPHA Isabel de La Mata - European Commission - DG Sante Natasha Azzopardi Muscat - EUPHA Nina Renshaw - EPHA Nicoline Tamsma - EuroHealthNet

Thu 2nd Health 1.C. Skills building seminar: Health information is beautiful: communicating health 9:00-10:30 information and information through infographics communication Chairperson(s): Nicole Rosenkötter - EUPHA (PHMR) Room K24 Developing guidelines for public health infographic design, Catherine Stones - United Kingdom EUPHA (PHMR) Investment for health and well-being: developing and using infographics as an advocacy tool in Wales Mariana Dyakova - United Kingdom Infographics at WHO/Europe, Holly C Nielsen - WHO EURO The in-house production of infographics at an European Union Agency (ECDC), Arne Haeger - Switzerland

Thu 2nd Healthy living 1.D. Round table: The Moral Mandate of Public Health? Back to Basics 9:00-10:30 Chairperson(s): John Middleton - United Kingdom, Els Maeckelberghe - The Netherlands

Room T6 Panel: Farhang Tahzib - United Kingdom UKFPH, EUPHA Martin McKee - United Kingdom (ETH) David Stuckler - Italy John Coggon - United Kingdom Peter Schröder-Bäck - EUPHA (ETH)

27 TIME, LOCATION TRACK PARALLEL SESSION 1 AND ORGANISER Thu 2nd Health 1.E. Workshop: Transformative health promotion: why gender stereotypes and culture matter 9:00-10:30 promotion Chairperson(s): Piroska Ostlin - WHO EURO

Room K22 Gender stereotypes and health in Europe: the outcomes of an evidence review, Isabel Yordi Aguirre - WHO EURO The cultural contexts of gender stereotypes and health promotion: the use of narrative and culture-centred­ WHO EURO, approaches, Nils Fietje - WHO EURO WHO RHN Panel: Klara Dokova - Bulgaria Joanna Herat - France Martine Bouvier Gallacchi - Switzerland MAIN CONFERENCE

Thursday 2 November Maria Del Mar Garcia-Calvente - Spain

Thu 2nd Health services 1.F. Workshop: Organizing and financing public health services in Europe 9:00-10:30 Chairperson(s): Ellen Nolte - European Observatory, Elke Jakubowski - WHO EURO

Room K16 The organization and financing of public health services in Europe – key lessons Bernd Rechel - European Observatory Observatory, The organization and financing of public health services in Italy, Andrea Poscia - Italy WHO EURO The organization and financing of public health services in Moldova, Angela Ciobanu - WHO Moldova The organization and financing of public health services in Sweden, Bo Burström - Sweden

Thu 2nd Health services 1.G. Round table: Global health and capacity building 9:00-10:30 research Chairperson(s): Kevin Mccarthy - European Commission - EuropeAid, Jaap Koot - The Netherlands

Room T5 Policy for the Laboratory Network in Haiti, process of situation analysis and policy formulation Jean Sakande - Burkina Faso DG DEVCO Formulation of a National Policy for Universal Health Coverage in Uganda, process of stakeholders’ EuropeAid, EC involvement and policy formulation, Freddie Ssengooba - Uganda Formulation of policy recommendations for urban healthcare for the poor, process of knowledge synthesis and policy dialogue, Atm Iqbal Anwar - Bangladesh

Thu 2nd The health 1.H. Round table: Use of indicators for good governance in primary health care in the Nordic 9:00-10:30 workforce dimension area Chairperson(s): Göran - Sweden Room K12 Development of Primary Health Care performance measurement, Hans Kluge - WHO EURO The National Swedish model for knowledge based recommendations and monitoring of performance Board of Health Irene Nilsson-Carlsson - Sweden and Welfare Indicators used to measure Primary Health Care performance in Russia, Anna Korotkova - Russia Patient-centered health care teams in Tromsö, Norway, Jan Magne Linnsund - Norway

28 TIME, LOCATION TRACK PARALLEL SESSION 1

AND ORGANISER Thursday 2 November MAIN CONFERENCE Thu 2nd Infectious 1.I. Workshop: Vaccinating Europe: challenges old and new 9:00-10:30 diseases Chairperson(s): Michael Edelstein - United Kingdom, Maria Ganczak - Poland

Room K14 The global vaccine hesitancy landscape, Pauline Patterson - United Kingdom The ECDC role in strengthening the evidence base to address vaccine hesitancy, Karam Adel - Sweden EUPHA (ICD) Changing attitudes to childhood immunisation in English parents, Joanne Yarwood - United Kingdom Measles in Arges county, Romania, 2017, Adrian Stoica - Romania Addressing HPV vaccine hesitancy in Denmark, Bolette Soborg - Denmark

Thu 2nd Chronic diseases 1.K. Skills building seminar: Prevention and Control of Noncommunicable Diseases in 9:00-10:30 WHO/Europe region: demonstrating the impact of public health efforts through the Natural Experiments Study Room T1 Chairperson(s): Iveta Nagyova - EUPHA (CHR)

WHO EURO, Principles and the methods of the WHO/Europe Natural Experiments Study, Gauden Galea - WHO EURO EUPHA (CHR) Introduction to Natural Experiments: from John Snow through to the present, David Stuckler - Italy Preliminary findings from the WHO/Europe Natural Experiments Study Andy Snell - Denmark Liisa Valsta - Finland

Thu 2nd Migrant and 1.L. Workshop: A resource for good. How WHO's toolkit is strengthening Europe's health 9:00-10:30 ethnic minority response to migration health Chairperson(s): Piroska Ostlin - WHO EURO, Santino Severoni - WHO EURO Room K21 Country assessment outcomes: how toolkits are relevant in assisting Member States WHO EURO Santino Severoni - WHO EURO Migration and Toolkit for assessing health system capacity to manage large influxes of migrants: methodology, content Health and application, Giuseppe Annunziata - Denmark

Thu 2nd Mental health 1.M. Workshop: Mental health of lesbian, gay and bisexuals: results from national 9:00-10:30 and cross-European studies Chairperson(s): Richard Bränström - EUPHA (SGMH), Arjan Van Der Star - EUPHA (SGMH) Room K13 Hidden from happiness: Structural stigma, sexual orientation concealment, and life satisfaction among EUPHA (SGMH) sexual minorities across 28 European countries, Richard Bränström - EUPHA (SGMH) Insights into mental health among gay, bisexual and other men who have sex with men in Scotland, Wales, Northern Ireland, and the Republic of Ireland, Lisa Mcdaid - United Kingdom Mental health and military service by sexual orientation among young Swiss men, Jen Wang - Switzerland Social anxiety in sexual minorities: A systematic review of the empirical literature, Conor Mahon - Ireland

29 TIME, LOCATION TRACK PARALLEL SESSION 1 AND ORGANISER Thu 2nd Child and 1.N. Workshop: Swedish Dentistry from a Preventive Perspective 9:00-10:30 adolescent Chairperson(s): Dowen Birkhed - Sweden public health Room K23 Swedish Dentistry - Public and Private Dental Care & Education, Björn Klinge - Sweden Swedish Dentistry from an European and Economical Perspective, Eeva Widström - Norway Malmö Preventive Dental Care in Sweden for Children, Adults & Elderly, Dowen Birkhed - Sweden University and Arctic University of Norway

MAIN CONFERENCE Thu 2nd Diet and 1.O. Workshop: From potential to practice? how can we implement effective physical Thursday 2 November 9:00-10:30 physical activity activity referral schemes? Chairperson(s): Ing-Mari Dohrn - Sweden, Carl Johan Sundberg - Sweden Room T2 Physical Activity on Prescription (FaR) in Sweden - effectiveness and lessons learned, Ing-Mari Dohrn - Sweden YFA FYSS 2017 - a tool for healthcare professionals when prescribing physical activity, Agneta Ståhle – Sweden Physical Activity on Prescription in patients with metabolic risk factors: a 6-month follow-up study Stefan Lundqvist - Sweden Stuck in the "exercise" trap: Current issues and future directions for UK exercise referral schemes Paula Watson - United Kingdom Using activity monitors to support physical activity changes: experiences from exercise referral schemes in Wales, Jemma Hawkins - United Kingdom

Thu 2nd Public health 1.P. Skills building seminar: Skills building in HTA: how to address the economic impact of 9:00-10:30 monitoring and public health interventions reporting Chairperson(s): Chiara de Waure - EUPHA (HTA), Giacomo Scaioli - Italy Room T4 (Almost) Everything you wanted to know on cost-effectiveness analyses of public health interventions EUPHA (HTA) Tek-Ang Lim - EUPHA (ECO) (ECO), EUPHAnxt The potential of daily nutrition as preventative health technology, Irene Lenoir-Wijnkoop - France

Thu 2nd Public 1.Q. Workshop: Health literacy in different countries and populations: the many approaches 9:00-10:30 health and to research occupational Chairperson(s): Orkan Okan - Germany, Luís Saboga Nunes - EUPHA (HP) Room K15 health Health literacy in crisis-affected Afghanistan: a quantitative study on beliefs and barriers EUPHA (HP), Stefanie Harsch - Germany Bielefeld Health as lived cultural practice in everyday life of Hispano-American immigrants to Switzerland University Isabella Bertschi - Switzerland The IC-Health project: improving digital health literacy in Europe, Pietro Del Giudice - Italy Assessing Health Information Literacy by a Knowledge Test, Anne-Kathrin Mayer - Germany A qualitative health literacy study in fourth grade primary school children, Orkan Okan - Germany

30 TIME, LOCATION TRACK POSTER WALKS

AND ORGANISER Thursday 2 November MAIN CONFERENCE Thu 2nd Poster walks 1 1.R. Poster walk: To improve cancer care 9:00-10:30 Chairperson(s): Viviane Van Casteren – Belgium

T foyer 1.R.1 Simulating PSA reflex algorithm in hospital: how much can be saved?, Gianmarco Troiano - Italy 1.R.2 Cervical cancer surveillance, Arkhangelsk Cancer Registry, Northwest Russia, Elena Roik - Russia 1.R.3 Breast cancer screening, risk factors and simptoms awareness among sicilian women, Maria Fiore - Italy 1.R.4 Development of a policy paper on National Cancer Control Programmes, Marjetka Jelenc - Slovenia 1.R.5 Age, sex and place of residence predicted the diagnosis of late stage colorectal cancer in Estonia Keiu Paapsi - Estonia 1.R.6 A new cancer report for Germany: Bridging knowledge gaps, Klaus Kraywinkel - Germany 1.R.7 Regional cancer mortality inequalities in Bulgaria related to socio-economic indicators (2000–2012) Virginia Atanasova - Bulgaria 1.R.8 Cancer care and mortality in patients with schizophrenia, substance use and mood disorders in Finland, Kristiina Manderbacka - Finland 1.R.9 Psycho- care in breast cancer: Determinants of use and need over the course of the disease Hannah Nakata - Germany 1.R.10 Value BREAST Cancer Care: a pilot project to build a population and value based system of care Andrea Silenzi - Italy 1.R.11 Ferrara Open Health, Engaging all actors to improve local health services through shared information, Francesca Bravi - Italy 1.R.12 The contribution of smoking to the gender gap in life expectancy in Sweden in 1997-2014 Olof Östergren - Sweden Thu 2nd Poster walks 2 1.S. Poster walk: Environmental and occupational health 9:00-10:30 Chairperson(s): Marija Jevtic - EUPHA (ENV)

T foyer 1.S.1 Better to have a stroke on weekdays? Evidence from the Upper Austrian stroke registry Silvia Angerer - Austria 1.S.2 Night work and risk of accidental injuries, Ann Dyreborg Larsen - Denmark 1.S.3 Sickness absence as a predictor of disability retirement in different occupational classes Laura Salonen - Finland 1.S.4 Incidence and length of sickness absence in the employed and non-employed Finnish population Jenni Blomgren - Finland 1.S.5 Changes in job insecurity and economic worries during the Great Recession in Germany Timo-Kolja Pförtner - Germany 1.S.6 Workplace health promotion in Europe . Findings from ProHealth65+, Nicola Magnavita - Italy 1.S.7 Sun protective behaviors in Agricultural Workers from North-Eastern Italy (2016), Matteo Ricco - Italy 1.S.8 Anxiety and somatoform disorder in the descendants of people exposed to radiation in Kazakhstan Almira Manatova - Kazakhstan 1.S.9 Primary DNA damage in salivary leukocytes of children exposed to air pollutants . MAPEC_LIFE project, Marco Verani - Italy 1.S.10 Air quality in a shire of Turkey: Sulphur dioxide, particulate matter 10 and number of deaths, 2016 Gamze Varol Saraçogˇlu - Turkey 1.S.11 Aspects of patients’ and interventionists’ medical exposure to ionizing radiation Ileana Prejbeanu - Romania 1.S.12 Systematic review: effectiveness of expanded cardiac rehabilitation in coronary heart disease Anne-Mette Hedager Momsen - Denmark

31 TIME, LOCATION AND ORGANISER PLENARY SESSION Thu 2nd Plenary 1: Sharing our common wealth: the need to strengthen the social dimension of the EU 11:00-12:00 Moderator: Caroline Costongs, EuroHealthNet Victoria Hall Keynote speaker: Karl Falkenberg, European Political Strategy Centre (EPSC), European Commission EuroHealthNet Panellists: Gaetan Lafortune, OECD Clare Bambra, United Kingdom Taru Koivisto, Finland

TIME, LOCATION AND ORGANISER JOIN THE NETWORKS Thu 2nd - 12:00-13:15 - Room K21 – EUPHA (ENV) Environment related disease: Join the network MAIN CONFERENCE Thursday 2 November Thu 2nd - 12:00-13:15 - Room K13 - EUPHA (FN) Food and nutrition: Join the network Thu 2nd - 12:00-13:15 - Room K24 - EUPHAnxt EUPHAnxt: Join the network Thu 2nd - 12:00-13:15 - Room K22 - EUPHA (HSR) Health services research: Join the network Thu 2nd - 12:00-13:15 - Room K23 - EUPHA (ECO) Public health economics: Join the network Thu 2nd - 12:00-13:15 - Room K14 - EUPHA (PMH) Public mental health: Join the network Thu 2nd - 12:00-13:15 - Room K12 - EUPHA (SSWH) Social security, work and health: Join the network Thu 2nd - 12:00-13:15 - Room K15 - EUPHA (URB) Urban public health: Join the network

TIME, LOCATION AND ORGANISER LUNCH SYMPOSIUM Thu 2nd Lunch Symposium: Using One Health approach to combat Antimicrobial resistance (AMR) 12:15-13:15 AMR is a global problem of complex epidemiology. The One Health concept typically considers three Room K11 environments: human, animal, and physical. This lunch symposium will show how combatting AMR benefits from a One Health approach. LIF Thu 2nd Lunch Symposium: Gender differences in coronary artery disease in Europe – presentation of factsheets 12:15-13:15 The GenCAD consortium presents factsheets for health professionals and the general public on gender differences Room K16 in coronary heart disease and its prevention. GenCAD

TIME, LOCATION AND ORGANISER PLENARY SESSION Thu 2nd Plenary 2: Winds of Change: from public to private, from collective to individual . 13:15-14:15 How can public health systems adapt to a changing world?

Victoria Hall Moderator: Natasha Azzopardi Muscat, EUPHA Speakers/Panellists: EUPHA Aaron Reeves, United Kingdom Holly Jarman, USA Erio Ziglio, former WHO EURO Anna Sarkadi, Sweden Dineke Zeegers Paget, EUPHA

32 TIME, LOCATION TRACK PARALLEL SESSION 2

AND ORGANISER Thursday 2 November MAIN CONFERENCE Thu 2nd Communities 2.A. Pitch presentations: Neighbourhoods and communities 14:25-15:25 and Chairperson(s): Arpana Verma - EUPHA (URB) environment Room K11 The socio-economic impacts of complex health-related interventions at the community-level Freia De Bock - Germany Barcelona Health in the Neighbourhoods programme: the experience in Besòs-Maresme, Esther Sánchez - Spain A comprehensive assessment of community needs as an initial step in the One Good Year Added study Kristina Hoffmann - Germany Promoting sexual health among women on opioid treatment in community pharmacy: A qualitative study Laura Medina-Perucha - United Kingdom The rules for intersectoral policy processes in the Norwegian national policy on global health arena Catherine M. Jones - Canada The advantages of home visits compared to providing care in a setting, Maria Jensberg Leirbakk - Norway Built environmental characteristics and diabetes: a systematic review and meta-analysis Joreintje Mackenbach - The Netherlands

Thu 2nd Public health 2.B. Oral presentations: Public health at large 14:25-15:25 policy Chairperson(s): Michael Moore - Australia, Arnaud Chiolero - Switzerland

Room T3 Impact of public health initiatives in acute coronary syndrome and stroke, Paulo Sousa - Portugal The influence of social stigma on diabetes self-management amongst Maltese individuals with diabetes Norma Buttigieg - Malta NGOs in Turkey: Accountability in humanitarian assistance, Perihan Torun - Turkey Increased genetic susceptibility of the Hungarian Roma population to venous thrombosis Róza Ádány - EUPHA (PHG) Difference in health related quality of life of chronic liver diseases and general population Paolo Angelo Cortesi - Italy

Thu 2nd Health 2.C. Pitch presentations: Causes and effects in public health 14:25-15:25 information and Chairperson(s): Nicole Rosenkötter - EUPHA (PHMR) communication Room K24 Changes in burden of disease and the epidemiological transition, Gabriel Gulis - Denmark How stakeholders’ perceive the effects of future Scottish tobacco control on smoking inequalities Josée Lapalme - Canada International survey of the prevalence and impact of head and body pain, Laerke Nielsen - Denmark D .E .P .R .E .S .S . Study: Depression Effects on Placement, Recovery and Endpoint of Surgical Stay Mark Bigder - Canada Associations of relative income and subjective social status with favorable cardiovascular health Krisztina Gero - United States Variation, companionship and manageability important for recovery during working hours Ejlertsson - Sweden Labour market position at age 18 and mental health related mortality up until ages 33 to 39 Josefin Sundin -Sweden Emergence of chronic diseases and comorbidity in older Finns: The sequences and social determinants Yaoyue Hu - Germany

33 TIME, LOCATION TRACK PARALLEL SESSION 2 AND ORGANISER Thu 2nd Healthy living 2.D. Oral presentations: Work and health status 14:25-15:25 Chairperson(s): Angelique De Rijk - The Netherlands

Room T6 How did employment and financial strain affect lone mothers’ health around the economic crisis? Nina Kirk - United Kingdom Occupational stress and metabolic syndrome in health care workers, Nicola Magnavita - Italy Trends in the association between precarious employment and self-rated health in Germany Timo-Kolja Pförtner - Germany Does the work environment force university academics into workaholism and work-family conflict? Steffen Torp - Norway Heat-related illnesses among Agricultural Workers in North-Eastern Italy (2017), Matteo Ricco - Italy MAIN CONFERENCE Thursday 2 November Thu 2nd Health 2.E. Oral presentations: Tobacco - from cigarettes to snuff 14:25-15:25 promotion Chairperson(s): Luís Saboga Nunes - EUPHA (HP)

Room K22 Tobacco retailer density, local norms & maternal smoking during pregnancy: a case crossover analysis Jamie Pearce - United Kingdom Improvement in knowledge and perception about hazards of smokeless tobacco: Cluster randomized trial Shafquat Rozi - Pakistan Impact of NCD Control Policies on change in smoking prevalence in the WHO European Region Belgin Unal - Turkey Policy evaluation using time series models - the case of Tobacco Control in Sweden, Nicola Orsini - Sweden Electronic cigarette use and smoking initiation in Scottish adolescents: a cohort study Jamie Pearce - United Kingdom Thu 2nd Health services 2.F. Oral presentations: Health services research 14:25-15:25 Chairperson(s): Judith de Jong - EUPHA (HSR), Celine Miani - Germany

Room K16 Israel’s elderly population quality of care: overview of indicators Ronit Calderon-Margalit - Israel Continuity of care for chronic and indigent patients: a stakeholder analysis in a metropolitan area Marie Dauvrin - Belgium The discharge process of German breast cancer center hospitals: A multilevel analysis Marina Nowak - Germany Caregivers’ burden and education level: does subjective health mediate the association? Susanne Schnitzer - Germany Institutional benefits of clinical ethics consultation, Silviya Yankulovska - Bulgaria

Thu 2nd Health services 2.G. - Pitch presentations: Social determinants of health 14:25-15:25 research Chairperson(s): Monika Mensing - Germany, Karolina Mackiewicz - Finland

Room T5 Mine, yours or ours? Income inequality and mental health in Northern Sweden Miguel San Sebastian - Sweden Does money matter? Characteristics associated with joint pain medication access among adults over 50 Aviad Tur-Sinai - Israel Exposing the health impacts of welfare advice in an age of austerity: a UK based study Monique Lhussier - United Kingdom

34 TIME, LOCATION TRACK PARALLEL SESSION 2

AND ORGANISER Thursday 2 November MAIN CONFERENCE Child health and place: How is neighborhood social capital associated with child health injuries? Malin Eriksson - Sweden Social differences in receiving questions and advice on smoking habits in primary care in Sweden Anu Molarius - Sweden Health literacy, general health and social support . Results from the survey ‘German Health Update’ Susanne Jordan - Germany Antenatal care services in Rwanda: Assessing Knowledge and Practices Among Providers Akashi Andrew Rurangirwa - Sweden

Thu 2nd The health 2.H. Oral presentations: Work and health 1 14:25-15:25 workforce Chairperson(s): Jeannette de Boer - The Netherlands

Room K12 Predicting long-term sickness absence due to mental disorders by using occupational health surveys Marieke Van Hoffen - The Netherlands Determinants of working until retirement among older workers with and without chronic diseases Ranu Sewdas - The Netherlands Workplace level differences in the risk of disability retirement, Mikko Laaksonen - Finland Sickness allowance, unemployment and rehabilitation after a rejected disability pension application Riku Perhoniemi - Finland Why foreign-born more often are denied sickness benefit than native born,Martin Söder - Sweden Thu 2nd Infectious 2.I. Oral presentations: Infectious diseases and vaccines 14:25-15:25 diseases Chairperson(s): Michael Edelstein - United Kingdom

Room K14 Acute gastroenteritis and prevalence of noroviruses in Ontario, CA - 2009-2014 Stephanie L Hughes - Canada Hepatitis A: Epidemiologic trends and subgroup analysis of Regional Surveillance in Italy, 2002-2016 Angelo D'ambrosio - Italy Influenza vaccine coverage trends among targeted groups from 2006 to 2015, in France Aurélie Bocquier - France Human papillomavirus and vaccination: attitudes and practices among pediatricians in Italy Italo Francesco Angelillo - Italy Vaccine hesitancy: old defeat or new challenge for public health? A survey on pregnant women in Rome Azzurra Massimi - Italy

Thu 2nd Chronic diseases 2.K. - Oral presentations: Inequalities in physical and mental health 14:25-15:25 Chairperson(s): Jutta Lindert - EUPHA (PMH), Kristefer Stojanovski – United States

Room T1 Prescribing patterns in dependence forming medications in England, 2000-2015 Sally Mcmanus - United Kingdom Midlife socioeconomic determinants of dementia mortality at older ages, Kaarina Korhonen - Finland Growing through asphalt: What counteracts the long-term negative health impact of youth adversity? Ylva B Almquist - Sweden Uptake of secondary prevention following acute coronary syndrome among migrants and Danish born Hanne Winther Frederiksen - Denmark The influenc ne of length of naturalization on low birth weight among immigrants in Belgium Judith Racape - Belgium

35 TIME, LOCATION TRACK PARALLEL SESSION 2 AND ORGANISER Thu 2nd Migrant and 2.L. Pitch presentations: Marginalisation and health: migrants and homeless people 14:25-15:25 ethnic minority Chairperson(s): Agyemang - The Netherlands, Clara Affun-Adegbulu - Belgium health Room K21 A universal approach to recruitment in a home visiting program in a multiethnic district in Oslo Maria Jensberg Leirbakk - Norway Bias in assessing the effect of integration policies by comparing migrant health between countries Odile Sauzet - Germany Discrimination and its effect on health among immigrants and ethnic minorities: A scoping review Prabhjot Kour - Norway Mental ill-health, trauma and adverse post-migratory experiences among refugees from Syria in Sweden Petter Tinghög - Sweden MAIN CONFERENCE

Thursday 2 November Over-indebtedness is a risk for poor mental health . Scania Public Health Cohort 2000-2010 Per-Olof Östergren - Sweden Attitude change of medical students towards people facing homelessness through mandatory rotation Marc-Andre Lavallée - Switzerland Are refugees at increased risk of suicide compared with non-refugee migrants and the host population Christina Dalman - Sweden Equity in dementia care focusing on immigrants in Sweden: a nationwide register-based study Emma Lindgren - Sweden Thu 2nd Mental health 2.M. Pitch presentations: Mental health and cognition 14:25-15:25 Chairperson(s): Johan Bilsen - Belgium, Aleksandar Višnjic´ - Serbia

Room K13 Cognitive functions and health-related QoL across adulthood: results from a population-based study Elvira Mauz - Germany Whether depressive or not, adverse life events increase the odds of being in economic hardship Shafiqur Rahman -Sweden Mental illness decompensation between 2007 and 2016 in a Portuguese municipality Margarida Gil - Portugal Relations of sleep disturbances with psychosocial factors in female population 25-64 years in Russia Valery Gafarov - Russia Geographical differences in the use of newer and older antidepressants: a multi-cohort study Jaana Halonen - Finland Experience of sibling death in childhood and risk of psychiatric care in adulthood, Mikael Rostila - Sweden Psychological complaints in adolescence: do they track into young adulthood? Sara Brolin Låftman - Sweden

Thu 2nd Child and 2.N. Pitch presentations: Children and adolescents 14:25-15:25 adolescent Chairperson(s): Sijmen Reijneveld - The Netherlands public health Room K23 Inter-rater agreement between parent and teacher SDQ ratings in Swedish 3–5-year-olds Elisabet Fält - Sweden Kids and teens on wheels: a 6-year study of bicycle and moped injuries, Silja Kosola - Finland Establishing a nationwide monitoring system for childhood obesity and its determinants in Germany Gianni Varnaccia - Germany Health literacy in children– towards a child-centered conceptual understanding, Janine Bröder - Germany Qualitative methods in health literacy research in young children, Orkan Okan - Germany Attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder among university students, Marie-Pierre Tavolacci - France

36 TIME, LOCATION TRACK PARALLEL SESSION 2

AND ORGANISER Thursday 2 November MAIN CONFERENCE Thu 2nd Diet and 2.O. Skills building seminar: From public health lobbying to Public Affairs management for 14:25-15:25 physical activity health: a skills building workshop Chairperson(s): David Stuckler - Italy Room T2 Advocacy, lobbying and Public Affairs: mastering the logic of micro politics for health EUPHA (PHPP) Marleen Bekker - EUPHA (PHPP) Lobbying in the public domain: lessons from practice, Lea Bouwmeester - The Netherlands Public health advocacy and the European Public Health Alliance, Nina Renshaw - EPHA Thu 2nd Public health 2.P. Workshop: The added value of transnational public health training: Lessons from three 14:25-15:25 monitoring and initiatives reporting Chairperson(s): Kasia Czabanowska - ASPHER, Regine Ducos - France Room T4 The added value of transnational and intercultural training . The example of Europubhealth – Erasmus EHESP Mundus Joint Master Degree in Public Health, Olivier Grimaud - France Developing qualitative research skills and cultural sensitivity: stresses and opportunities for international students, William Sherlaw - France Doctoral-level education for senior global health leaders: leveraging diversity, technology and a flexible, experiential, competency based approach, Suzanne Babich - United States

Thu 2nd Public 2.Q. Pitch presentations: Hospital care: from avoidance to evaluation 14:25-15:25 health and Chairperson(s): Ricardo Filipe Mexia – Portugal occupational Room K15 health Documenting Social and Behavioral Factors: Insights from Potentially Preventable Hospitalizations Tetine Sentell - United States Spatial variations in acute hospitalization rates in Slovenia, Mircha Poldrugovac - Slovenia Monitoring the quality of health services in ICU: ten years of the SPIN-UTI network HAI surveillance Antonella Agodi - Italy Determinants of emergency room visits by older adults: a territorial analysis, Anne Penneau - France Is bigger better? Findings from a review on health outcomes and processes after merging of hospitals Gianfranco Damiani - Italy Inter-hospitals care pathway for Centers of Welcoming and Services for oncologic patients in Italy Giacomo Scaioli - Italy Determinants of higher rate of death and hospital use in a sample of older adults in Lazio Region Francesco Gilardi - Italy

TIME, LOCATION TRACK POSTER WALKS AND ORGANISER Thu 2nd 2.R. Poster walk: Policies and health (services) 14:25-15:25 Chairperson(s): Richard Bränström - EUPHA (SGMH)

T foyer 2.R.1 Willingness to pay and risky behaviours: results from the Pay for Others (PAY4O) study Loredana Covolo - Italy 2.R.2 Barcelona Health in the Neighbourhoods: an urban Health in All Policies strategy Ferran Daban - Spain 2.R.3 School Health Services in 30 European countries in 2009 and 2016: what is new and what has changed? Danielle Jansen - EUPHA (CAPH)

37 TIME, LOCATION TRACK POSTER WALKS AND ORGANISER 2.R.4 Consultation on Gypsy, Traveller and Roma people's engagement and trust in healthcare Lindsay Siebelt - United Kingdom 2.R.5 Quality Strategy for the Austrian Health Care System 2 .0, Brigitte Piso - Austria 2.R.6 Supporting development of health care in resource scarce environments Ruhija Hodza-Beganovic - Sweden 2.R.7 Danish Society of Public Health introduces a series of Public Health Barometers, Maja Bertram - Denmark 2.R.8 The impact of EU recommendations on the pharmaceutical policy of Greece, Ireland, Portugal and Spain, Luís Guedes - Portugal 2.R.9 Paradigm change: a new local health plan, Anna Cristina Simões Pinto De Oliveira - Portugal 2.R.10 Improved MNH care through participatory monitoring and feedback in urban private sectors, Bangladesh, Atm Iqbal Anwar - Bangladesh MAIN CONFERENCE

Thursday 2 November 2.R.11 Assessing the impact of cross-border healthcare, Katarzyna Byszek - Poland 2.R.12 Towards an understanding of resilience: Responding to Health Systems Shocks Johanna Hanefeld - United Kingdom 2.R.13 The association of paternal involvement and childhood bullying behavior, Mark Bigder - Canada 2.R.14 "One Good Year Added" for every citizen within a community, Freia De Bock - Germany Thu 2nd 2.S. Poster walk: Infectious diseases in Europe and worldwide 14:25-15:25 Chairperson(s): Gunter Pfaff - Germany

T foyer 2.S.1 HIV/STI prevalence, risk behavior and health care uptake in MSM/TG in districts of Indo-Nepal border, Gaetano Marrone - Sweden 2.S.2 Polish medical students’ attitudes regarding male circumcision as a strategy to HIV prevention Maria Ganczak - Poland 2.S.3 Supporting TB treatment adherence among vulnerable groups in Riga, Latvia Nicole Vidal - United Kingdom 2.S.4 Tuberculosis contact investigations by a small public health organization in Canada, 2012 to 2016 Geneviève Baron - Canada 2.S.5 Heroes and pariahs: Nurses in a viral haemorrhagic fever outbreak, Stéphanie Paillard-Borg - Sweden 2.S.6 Preparedness and meeting the needs of healthcare workers: a qualitative study on Ebola Evelien Belfroid - The Netherlands 2.S.7 Ethical issues in national pandemic influenza plans,Donato Greco - Italy 2.S.8 Integrating HIV and Substance Use Services: A Systematic Review Victoria Elizabeth Haldane - Singapore 2.S.9 Circuit parties: a funny danger or a dangerous fun? Gianmarco Troiano - Italy 2.S.10 Immunization coverage among children in Waldorf kindergartens, South West Germany 2015-2016 Gunter Pfaff - Germany 2.S.11 Parents seeking information about antibiotic use on the Internet: preliminary results Rossella Zucco - Italy 2.S.12 Antimicrobial resistance in patients with urinary tract infection in a healthcare facility in Greece, Demetris Lamnisos - Cyprus 2.S.13 Tailored communication interventions targeting Somali community in Sweden regarding MMR vaccination, Asha Jama - Sweden 2.S.14 Compliance with the Prostitution Reform Act in commercial sex premises in Wellington, New Zealand, Craig Thornley - New Zealand 2.S.15 Virulence factors in Vibrio parahaemolyticus isolates from bivalve shellfish,Stefania Barbieri - Italy 2.S.16 Evaluation of TB/HIV care integration under routine HIV/AIDS program in Nigeria Folajinmi Oluwasina - Nigeria

38 TIME, LOCATION TRACK PARALLEL SESSION 3

AND ORGANISER Thursday 2 November MAIN CONFERENCE Thu 2nd Communities 3.A. Pitch presentations: Urban health and physical activity 16:05-17:05 and Chairperson(s): Marcus Grant - United Kingdom, Federico Serra - Italy environment Room K11 Measuring the severity of road injuries in the EU Robert Bauer - Austria Do neighborhood socioeconomic characteristics contribute to depression and anxiety? Irina Motoc - The Netherlands What works to boost social relations and community wellbeing? A scoping review of the evidence Anne-Marie Bagnall - United Kingdom Municipal cross-sectoral policy implementation: urban form and physical activity in Peel Region James Dunn - Canada AEQUIPA-OUTDOOR ACTIVE: Attitudes, drivers and barriers of physical activity in 65-75-year-olds Lena Lotte Lübs - Germany The meaning of muscularity for successful aging Marjan Arvandi - Austria Active Aging: the influence of active jobs in midlife Nilsen - Sweden Analyzing the effects of health impact assessment on the Vieux-Sorel renewal project Jean Marie Buregeya - Canada

Thu 2nd Public health 3.B. Oral presentations: Policies on NCD risk factors 16:05-17:05 policy Chairperson(s): Darren Shickle - United Kingdom

Room T3 The implementation and impact of national smoke-free school legislation in Finland Hanna Ollila - Finland Today and tomorrow of Tobacco Control in Russia: achievements and challenges Marine Gambaryan - Russia Improving self-management for diabetes in diverse settings: example of Reciprocal Learning Approach Meena Daivadanam - Sweden Policy-making: Polarization and interest groups influence Damien Contandriopoulos - Canada

Thu 2nd Health 3.C. Oral presentations: What works for which disease? 16:05-17:05 information and Chairperson(s): Louise Gunning-Schepers - The Netherlands communication Room K24 Informational support: Needs and resources of male breast cancer patients Evamarie Midding - Germany Exercise for depression: What are the long-term effects of different exercise intensities? Björg Helgadóttir - Sweden Which Lynch Syndrome screening program can be implemented? Systematic review of economic evaluations, Marco Di Marco - Italy Post diagnostic support (PDS) for dementia: what factors are associated with PDS outcomes? Kate Levin - United Kingdom

39 TIME, LOCATION TRACK PARALLEL SESSION 3 AND ORGANISER Thu 2nd Healthy living 3.D. Pitch presentations: Work, health and sickness absence 16:05-17:05 Chairperson(s): Ellenor Mittendorfer Rutz - Sweden, Ashley McAllister - Sweden

Room T6 Night work as a risk factor for future disability pension due to mental diagnoses, Annina Ropponen - Finland Gender differences in diagnosis-specific sickness absence in middle-aged Finnish working population Sauli Jäppinen - Finland Joint effect of physical workload and leisure time physical activity on physical health functioning Jouni Lahti - Finland Future work disability trajectories among people on sick leave due to stress-related disorders Sara Sjölund - Sweden Disability pension due to common mental disorders and subsequent suicidal behaviour: a Swedish study MAIN CONFERENCE

Thursday 2 November Syed Rahman - Sweden Labour market segregation and gender differences in sickness absence: trends in 2005–2013 in Finland Taina Leinonen - Finland International comparison of work capacity evaluation in a social security setting, Johan Sengers - The Netherlands Temporal relationships between job strain and low back pain, Linda Magnusson Hanson - Sweden Thu 2nd Health 3.E. Pitch presentations: Smoking patterns and interventions 16:05-17:05 promotion Chairperson(s): Luís Saboga Nunes - EUPHA (HP)

Room K22 Cancer mortality due to smoking and alcohol in Eastern European men: results from the PrivMort study Denes Stefler -United Kingdom Qualitative exploration of participation to a quit smoking program in a population of apprentices Laetitia Ricci - France Social Support and Smoking Cessation among Patients with Myocardial Infarction in Armenia Varduhi Hayrumyan - Armenia Changes in smoking during the transition from adolescence to young adulthood, Elvira Mauz - Germany Limited availability of smoking cessation products in the Armenian pharmaceutical market Varduhi Hayrumyan - Armenia Physicians’ attitudes towards causal role of smoking in ischemic heart diseases in Estonia 1982–2014 Kersti Pärna - Estonia Training impact on physicians' knowledge in smoking cessation in Armenia, Varduhi Hayrumyan - Armenia Impact of the Health Check programme on the provision of smoking cessation interventions in England Samah Alageel - United Kingdom Thu 2nd Health services 3.F. Oral presentations: Health systems - challenges and innovations 16:05-17:05 Chairperson(s): Tit Albreht - Slovenia

Room K16 The impact of Participatory Budgeting: a systematic scoping review of evaluations and outcomes Peter Craig - United Kingdom The effects of community pharmacy public health interventions on health and health inequalities Adam Todd - United Kingdom Users perception of relational continuity of care in six Latin America countries healthcare networks Marianna Vitaloni - Spain Beyond DRG-based hospital payment: How countries pay for variable, specialized and low volume care Victor Stephani - Germany Health system governance via health targets: Insights from the Austrian health reform Herwig Ostermann - Austria

40 TIME, LOCATION TRACK PARALLEL SESSION 3

AND ORGANISER Thursday 2 November MAIN CONFERENCE Thu 2nd Health services 3.G. Pitch presentations: Health services innovative solutions 16:05-17:05 research Chairperson(s): Judith de Jong - EUPHA (HSR)

Room T5 Paracetamol prescription use—attitudes of Swedish healthcare providers Kamran Siddiqui - Singapore The perception of usefulness and benefits from ehealth solutions in chronic care among nurses Mariusz Duplaga - Poland The end of life in nursing homes . What to expect . What to measure . Tiba Delespierre - France The Economic and Health Challenge of Forgoing Healthcare Services among Elders Aviad Tur-Sinai - Israel Mobile-based intervention intended to stop obesity in pre-school children: The MINISTOP RCT Christine Delisle Nyström - Sweden The online Personal Health Check – How do Dutch citizens and professionals feel about it? Ien Van de Goor - The Netherlands Digital health interventions to fight smoking habits in European countries: a systematic review Francesco D'aloisio - Italy Public Health from the very beginning: neonatal incubators safety in a clinical setting Mattia Fattorini - Italy

Thu 2nd The health 3.H. Oral presentations: Work and health 2 16:05-17:05 workforce Chairperson(s): Jeannette de Boer - The Netherlands, Cecilie Nørby Thisted - Denmark

Room K12 Sickness absence due to musculoskeletal diagnoses by occupational class in Finland: a register study Johanna Pekkala - Finland Does supervisors’ managerial quality predict risk of depressive disorders in eldercare workers? Reiner Rugulies - Denmark The impact of depressive symptoms on early exit from paid employment in Europe: a longitudinal study Suzan Robroek - The Netherlands Effect of a workplace intervention on illegitimate job tasks: a cluster randomized controlled trial Elisabeth Framke - Denmark Return to work after neck or shoulder pain: a randomized clinical trial, Line Thorndal Moll - Denmark

Thu 2nd Infectious 3.I. Oral presentations: Innovative approaches to address AMR 16:05-17:05 diseases Chairperson(s): Gunter Pfaff - Germany

Room K14 Assessment of WHO immunologic criteria for identifying ART treatment failure in low-income settings Emilia Riggi - Italy Community antibiotic prescribing for RTIs in Malta: 1-year trend and associated influencing factors Erika Anne-Marie Saliba Gustafsson - Sweden Overall and second-line antibiotic use in the community in Israel - a call for action, Michal Krieger - Israel Antimicrobial stewardship in a primary care setting, Valentina Chiesa - Italy Four years of a Regional Antimicrobial Stewardship project: analysis of antibiotic consumption Antonio Madia - Italy

41 TIME, LOCATION TRACK PARALLEL SESSION 3 AND ORGANISER Thu 2nd Chronic diseases 3.K. Oral presentations: Controlling chronic conditions 16:05-17:05 Chairperson(s): Iveta Nagyova - EUPHA (CHR)

Room T1 Monitoring morbidity associated with chronic conditions: Portuguese National Health Survey 2014 Ivo Cruz - Portugal Survey participants have lower mortality rates than non-participants – results from FINRISK study Hanna Tolonen - Finland Impact of NCD Control Policies on change in body mass index and diabetes in the WHO Europe Region Belgin Unal - Turkey Which characteristics of frontline health systems affect the control of hypertension? Martin McKee - United Kingdom MAIN CONFERENCE

Thursday 2 November NCD control policies and alcohol consumption trends in WHO Europe countries between 2000 and 2014 Belgin Unal - Turkey Thu 2nd Migrant and 3.L. Oral presentations: Migrants' health 16:05-17:05 ethnic minority Chairperson(s): Allan Krasnik - EUPHA (MIG), Natalia Skogberg - Finland health Room K21 The impact of forced migration on mortality and mental health: a cohort study of 242,075 Finns Jari Haukka - Finland Does mothers’ origin affect neurocognitive development of preterm newborns at 24 months? Dino Gibertoni - Italy Informed choice in mammography screening program: a survey among first-time invitees in Germany Eva-Maria Berens - Germany 'Don't get hopeless': Daily strategies among children in an undocumented refugee situation Henry Ascher - Sweden The way towards Migrant Sensitive Health Care System – building the needed human resource capacity István Szilárd - Hungary Thu 2nd Mental health 3.M. Oral presentations: Mental health and sleep disorders 16:05-17:05 Chairperson(s): Johan Bilsen - Belgium, Barbara Nussbaumer-Streit - Austria

Room K13 School-Based Universal Strategy for Suicide Prevention: YAM - Youth Aware of Mental Health Programme Danuta Wasserman - Sweden Risk of myocardial infarction in male population aged 25-64 years with sleep disturbances Valery Gafarov - Russia Post-traumatic stress disorder in parents and school performance in their children, Lisa Berg - Sweden Association between childhood socioeconomic status and sleep quality among old age in Japan Natsuyo Yanagi - Japan Thu 2nd Child and 3.N. Pitch presentations: Child and adolescent health 16:05-17:05 adolescent Chairperson(s): Danielle Jansen - EUPHA (CAPH) public health Room K23 Social capital as a theory of change for young people’s health:a scoping review preliminary findings Antony Morgan - United Kingdom School-age children health behaviour survey - new element of public health surveillance in Lithuania Rolanda Valinteliene - Lithuania Maternity clinic practices and exclusive breastfeeding in Cyprus: BrEaST start in life study Mary Economou - Cyprus

42 TIME, LOCATION TRACK PARALLEL SESSION 3

AND ORGANISER Thursday 2 November MAIN CONFERENCE How to increase the likelihood of physical activity for university students Claudia Van Der Heijde - The Netherlands The Art of Prevention – training and ICT as support for competent practice, policy and politics Charli Eriksson - Sweden The gender gap in common mental disorder and self-harm, England 2000 to 2015 Sally Mcmanus - United Kingdom Healthy polities: do political systems matter for public health? Evidence for infant mortality rates Daniel Hagen - United States Embedding organisational development in educational institutions into a community network Katharina Rauh - Germany

Thu 2nd Diet and 3.O. Pitch presentations: Food, obesity and health 16:05-17:05 physical activity Chairperson(s): Alessandra Lafranconi - Italy, Farah Islam - Canada

Room T2 Modelling joint health effects of physical activity and obesity in North Rhine-Westphalia (NRW) Monika Mensing - Germany Nutritional quality in welfare catering: the Nutrient Analysis Critical Control Points process Giulio Barocco - Italy "Overweight" adults think they are "underweight": a household survey in rural Zambia Yukiko Tateyama - Japan Using vignettes to assess the role of context in retail food environment interventions Rebecca Hasdell - Canada Consumption of sweets and adipose tissue distribution in adults with cardiovascular diseases Donatas Austys - Lithuania Stakeholders emerging actions after the 2014 Mexican soda tax implementation Angela Carriedo - United Kingdom The effects of coffee consumption on insulin sensitivity and other risk factors for type 2 diabetes Derrick Alperet - Singapore

Thu 2nd Public health 3.P. Oral presentations: Systematic reviews and methods 16:05-17:05 monitoring and Chairperson(s): Giuseppe La Torre - EUPHA (EPI) reporting Room T4 Health Literacy Beyond the Individual: A Meta-Narrative Review Tetine Sentell - United States Multimorbidity and Out-of-pocket Expenditure on Medicines: A Systematic Review Grace Sum - Singapore A systematic literature review of the association between metabolic syndrome and migraine Valentina Andreeva - France Avoid exclusion of studies in synthesis of dose-response data using a novel one-stage approach Alessio Crippa - Sweden Systematic review of the cost-effectiveness of interventions for heart valve replacement Kristina Schaubert - Germany

43 TIME, LOCATION TRACK PARALLEL SESSION 3 AND ORGANISER Thu 2nd Public 3.Q. Pitch presentations: Maternal health 16:05-17:05 health and Chairperson(s): Ruth Dundas - United Kingdom, Inanna Reinsperger - Austria occupational Room K15 health Interventions for preeclampsia prevention: An umbrella review of meta-analyses of randomised trials Konstantinos Giannakou - Cyprus Pregnant women’s awareness and attitudes about stem cells and their application in medicine Olga Mešcˇeriakova - Lithuania Urinary incontinence in pre/postpartum period and effectiveness of pelvic floor muscle training Pinar Okyay - Turkey Childhood out of home care and preterm birth: a Swedish national intergenerational cohort study Sol Juárez - Sweden

MAIN CONFERENCE Pregnant women and medicines use: knowledge, attitude, and practice in Italy, Italo Francesco Angelillo - Italy Thursday 2 November Intakes of minerals linked to the drinking of bottled waters by French pregnant women Marie-Pierre Sauvant-Rochat - France Noninvasive prenatal test (NIPT): Evolving screening strategy and first real world experience Felix Gurtner - Switzerland Maternal age and obstetric interventions in women with and without pregnancy complications Kristjana Einarsdottir - Iceland

TIME, LOCATION TRACK POSTER WALKS AND ORGANISER Thu 2nd Poster walk 1 3.R. Poster walk: Marginalisation and migration 16:05-17:05 Chairperson(s): Peter Schröder-Bäck - EUPHA (ETH) 3.R.1 T foyer Estimates of early marriage among Syrian refugees in Lebanon in 2016 compared to Syria pre-2011 Sawsan Abdulrahim - Lebanon 3.R.2 Valuable but incomplete! Migrants’ perspectives on health examination in Stockholm Jad Shedrawy - Sweden 3.R.3 What value for whom? - Authorities perspectives on health examinations for asylum seekers in Sweden, Sara Delilovic - Sweden 3.R.4 Metis Nation of Alberta (MNA): collaborative research practices and procedures, M. Jill Sporidis - Canada 3.R.5 Alfred Schütz’s theory of foreignness in the context of public health, Hürrem Tezcan-Güntekin - Germany 3.R.6 Trans-national coverage in Eurasian Economic Union, Viktoria Madyanova - Russia 3.R.7 Knocking on wood and bucking up your ideas: control and fatalism in Gypsy and Traveller health Natalie Forster - United Kingdom 3.R.8 Stockholm county councils health advisers in collaboration with the center of civic orientation Haibe Hussein - Sweden 3.R.9 Resources and burden of Turkish family caregivers of people with dementia Hürrem Tezcan-Güntekin - Germany 3.R.10 Differences in health-risk behaviors between social strata in Stockholm County, Daniel Falkstedt - Sweden 3.R.11 Limited health literacy and associated factors in old age . Results of a German cross-sectional study Dominique Vogt - Germany 3.R.12 Is senior volunteering a solution for social exclusion of seniors? - "Let us be active!" project Karolina Mackiewicz - Finland 3.R.13 Social participation patterns and the incidence of functional disability: The JAGES Shigekazu Ukawa - Japan 3.R.14 Short-term association between environmental factors and Alzheimer hospital admissions in Madrid Julio Diaz - Spain

44 TIME, LOCATION TRACK POSTER WALKS

AND ORGANISER Thursday 2 November MAIN CONFERENCE Thu 2nd Poster walk 2 3.S. Poster walk: Public health matters 16:05-17:05 Chairperson(s): Els Maeckelberghe - The Netherlands

T foyer 3.S.1 Variations in the Risk of Labour Induction Across Hospitals and NHS Trusts in the United Kingdom Sarah Carter - United Kingdom 3.S.2 Victimization and Perpetration of Intimate Partner Violence and Quality of Life in elderly in Brazil Deise Warmling - Brazil 3.S.3 Monitoring of child development and school readiness at the community level Freia De Bock - Germany 3.S.4 Gossip and rumors - undervalued sources of suffering and disease, Arild Aambø - Norway 3.S.5 Antimicrobial susceptibility of Salmonella Typhimurium strains isolated from shellfish and seawater Stefania Barbieri - Italy 3.S.6 Handle a chickenpox outbreak in an Accommodation Centre for Asylum Seeker (CARA) in the ASL Roma 4, Maria Teresa Sinopoli - Italy 3.S.7 Replication of validation study of the Chew HL screening tool in an adult Italian population Pietro Del Giudice - Italy 3.S.8 Gender health gap and education in Europe . A comparison between health funding models Sara Pinillos-Franco – Spain 3.S.9 Gender equity in academic publishing: addressing diversity in public health journals Jamie Lundine - United Kingdom 3.S.10 Independence in basic self-care in elderly acute medical patients: a retrospective cohort study Denisa Mendonça - Portugal 3.S.11 Burden of hypertensive heart disease in Serbia in the last 25 years, Milena Šantric Milicevic - Serbia 3.S.12 How does sex affect the care dependency risk one year after stroke? Susanne Schnitzer - Germany 3.S.13 Knowledge, Attitudes and Practices related to Schistosomiasis among children in Northern Senegal Fabrizio Bert - Italy 3.S.14 Does a Clinical Pathway on ischemic stroke work?, Gabriele Giubbini - Italy 3.S.15 Estimating vaccination-coverage of 7years-old children - data analysis of electronic data systems Manuel Bragança Pereira - Portugal

TIME, LOCATION TRACK PLENARY SESSION AND ORGANISER Thu 2nd Opening ceremony - Birger Forsberg, Chair of the 10th European Public Health Conference 17:15-18:00 Keynote speakers: Victoria Hall Agneta Karlsson, Sweden Ola Rosling, Gapminder, Sweden, in commemoration of Hans Rosling Claudia Stein, WHO EURO

45 TIME, LOCATION TRACK PARALLEL SESSION 4 AND ORGANISER Fri 3rd Communities 4.A. Oral presentations: Public health interventiemilia ons (life-style interventions) and 8:30-9:30 and environ- prevention of NCDs ment Chairperson(s): Thomas Dorner – Austria, Josefine Emilia Björkqvist –United Kingdom Room K11 Community-based lifestyle and leadership intervention (CBLLI) to prevent diabetes in arab women Maha Nubani Huseini - Israel Physical activity and sedentary behavior among older adults with non-communicable diseases Liliana Orellana - Australia Cost-effectiveness of physical activity interventions in four European countries, Alessandra Lafranconi - Italy Socio-economic inequality in the use of secondary prevention of cardiovascular disease Martin McKee - United Kingdom Impacts of federal income tax policies on heart disease burden in the USA: A microsimulation analysis Daniel Kim - United States

Fri 3rd Public health 4.B. Oral presentations: Epidemiology and policy 8:30-9:30 policy Chairperson(s): Dorli Kahr-Gottlieb - Austria

Room T3 Effectiveness of networks of mental health services on continuity of care and social integration Vincent Lorant - Belgium Couple relationship moderates anxiety and depression trajectories over the transition to parenthood Barbara Figueiredo - Portugal Suicide after discharge from psychiatric inpatient care: the role of intolerant societies Karlijn Roex - Germany Monitoring positive mental health in Swedish adolescents, Fredrik Söderqvist - Sweden Characteristics and outcomes of acute coronary syndrome in migrant and Italian-born population Maria Pia Fantini - Italy Friday 3 November MAIN CONFERENCE

Fri 3rd Health 4.C. Pitch presentations: Innovative public health 8:30-9:30 information and Chairperson(s): Odile Mekel - EUPHA (HIA) communication Room K24 Knowledge translation platforms: Evaluating capacity building to bridge research and health policy Julia Scarlett - Sweden Designing exercise for people with demential, Doris Gebhard - Austria Lay health worker training program for Syrian refugees in Turkey, Zeynep Simsek - Turkey How to create resilient and healthy communities? A new method to evaluate promising practices Hanneke Kruize - The Netherlands Evaluating a game intervention on collaboration processes in local public health policymaking Jan Jansen - The Netherlands Social marketing intervention to change antibiotic prescribing behavior in Malta Cecilia Stålsby Lundborg - Sweden Alcohol labelling in Europe – overview of advocacy and policy developments, Aleksandra Kaczmarek - Belgium A pilot of integrative (cumulative) health impact assessment in Northern British Columbia, Canada Chris Buse - Canada

46 TIME, LOCATION TRACK PARALLEL SESSION 4 AND ORGANISER Fri 3rd Healthy living 4.D. Pitch presentations: Working life and health aspects 8:30-9:30 Chairperson(s): Karien Stronks - The Netherlands

Room T6 Job stress is predictor of 16-th years risk of cardiovascular diseases in female population Valery Gafarov - Russia A snap chat of occupational health and safety practice at secondary and tertiary hospitals, Aydin Erdal Bes¸er - Turkey Factors underlying Japanese hospital nurses’ intention to continue working, Megumi Sasaki - Japan Workloads as mediator for the association between job requirement level and health of older workers Karolin Hiesinger - Germany Migration background characteristics and the association between unemployment and suicide Andrea Dunlavy - Sweden Work-related psychosocial risks – Determination of cut-off values for job demands and job control Sabrina Zeike - Germany Social differentials in older persons’ employment in Canada, Denmark, Sweden and the UK in 2010-15 Ashley McAllister - Sweden MAIN CONFERENCE

Ddevelopment of health-promoting and sustainable leadership: follow-up of an intervention study Friday 3 November Andrea Eriksson - Sweden

Fri 3rd Health 4.E. Workshop: NCDs, prevention strategies and the SDGs 8:30-9:30 promotion Chairperson(s): Tanja Tomson - Sweden

Room K22 NCDs, prevention strategies and the SDGs, Hans Kluge - WHO EURO

Stockholm Panel: County Council Tryggve Eng Kielland - Norway Claes-Göran Östensson - Sweden Yvonne Forsell - Sweden

Fri 3rd Health services 4.F. Pitch presentations: Health care access and quality 8:30-9:30 Chairperson(s): Elena Petelos - Greece

Room K16 COORDENA questionnaire for measuring clinical coordination among health care levels in Spain M Luisa Vázquez Navarrete - Spain Do Public-Private Partnerships add value to healthcare delivery? Maria Lucia Specchia - Italy The challenge of organisational assessment in HTA across Europe . Building a new framework Pasquale Cacciatore - Italy Improving quality and efficiency in healthcare . The Lean Thinking strategy, Paolo Campanella - Italy Health System Responsiveness and its Social Determinants in Ambulatory Care in Germany Florian Tille - Germany Effects of Health literacy on Health Service Utilization . Findings from Germany, Eva-Maria Berens - Germany Visual outcome and vision related quality of life among patients after cataract surgery in Armenia Aida Giloyan - Armenia

47 TIME, LOCATION TRACK PARALLEL SESSION 4 AND ORGANISER Fri 3rd Health services 4.G. Pitch presentations: Environment and health 8:30-9:30 research Chairperson(s): Peter Van Den Hazel - EUPHA (ENV), Chris Buse - Canada

Room T5 The impact of EU legislation on liquid laundry detergent pods on children exposures in Italy Laura Settimi - Italy Carbon dioxide ingress into residential houses at Gorebridge in Midlothian, Scotland, United Kingdom Richard Othieno - United Kingdom Residential greenspace modifies the effect of road traffic noise exposure on mental health in youth Donka Dimitrova - Bulgaria Effects of road-traffic nuisance on the active travel modes . What are the consequences? Mohamed Mouloud Haddak - France Risk exposure to BPA in a Sicilian population, Margherita Ferrante - Italy Access to a quiet side, green near the dwelling and perceived control over traffic noise exposure Natalie Riedel - Germany A sibling study of whether maternal exposure to natural space is related to birth weight Jamie Pearce - United Kingdom Public Health: Pathways for an ecological transition, Astrid Brousselle - Canada

Fri 3rd The health 4.H. Oral presentations: Inequality, employment and health status 8:30-9:30 workforce Chairperson(s): Danijela Stimac - Croatia

Room K12 Identifying injury related inequalities using data from the European Injury Data Base (IDB) Ronan Lyons - United Kingdom The contribution of alcohol and smoking to income differences in longevity in the Nordic countries Olof Östergren - Sweden Efficacy of brief alcohol interventions at general hospitals: The role of employment status Sophie Baumann -

Friday 3 November Germany MAIN CONFERENCE Socioeconomic inequalities in mortality from pancreatic cancer – A Swedish national cohort study Amal Khanolkar - United Kingdom 36-year trends in socioeconomic differences in self-rated health among Finnish adults Eero Lahelma - Finland

Fri 3rd Infectious 4.I. Oral presentations: Infectious diseases: planning and timing of interventions 8:30-9:30 diseases Chairperson(s): Aura Timen - EUPHA (IDC), Anna Odone - Italy

Room K14 The optimal timing of HCV therapy in liver transplant: cost and effectiveness of new opportunities Paolo Angelo Cortesi - Italy Using HTA to lead decision on the use of adjuvanted trivalent inactivated influenza vaccine in Italy Chiara de Waure - EUPHA (HTA) Direct observation of hand hygiene compliance among healthcare workers in a of Rome Valentina Baccolini - Italy A telehealth method for directly observed therapy in TB patients of Auckland, New Zealand Nick Eichler - New Zealand Immunogenicity and safety of the multicomponent meningococcal B vaccine (4CMenB): a meta-analysis Lamberto Manzoli - Italy

48 TIME, LOCATION TRACK PARALLEL SESSION 4 AND ORGANISER Fri 3rd Chronic diseases 4.K. Pitch presentations: Chronic diseases: systems of care and outcomes 8:30-9:30 Chairperson(s): Viviane Van Casteren - Belgium

Room T1 Promoting a culture of chronic disease prevention in Albania, Tetine Sentell - United States Iso-resources stratification model for chronic patients, Agnese Verzuri - Italy Estimating the lifetime risk of cancer in one region of Switzerland, Arnaud Chiolero - Switzerland Fair payment for complex patients: costing care for patients with multiple chronic conditions George Keel - Sweden Towards the Development of a Diabetes Public Health Reporting System in Germany, Thomas Ziese - Germany Influence of hypertension on the body balance, Magdalena Barbara Kaziuk - Poland The relation between type 2 diabetes and obstructive sleep apnea in obese patients, Gabriela Chirea - Romania

Fri 3rd Migrant and 4.L. Pitch presentations: Migrant health and intervention 8:30-9:30 ethnic minority Chairperson(s): Charles Agyemang - The Netherlands health Room K21 REFUGIUM Refugee Health Awareness and Empowerment Program in Hamburg, Germany MAIN CONFERENCE Christine Faerber - Germany Friday 3 November Community Practices for Improving the Health Insurance Status among Roma, Deyan Kolev - Bulgaria Merging social accountability and legal empowerment to improve access to health for Roma in Macedonia Borjan Pavlovski - Macedonia Building Trust in Roma Mothers through Communication and Empowerment: a Resilient Policy Approach Petya Trendafilova -Bulgaria Explanations for health differences in Russian, Somali and Kurdish origin migrants in Finland Shadia Rask - Finland Erithrean refugees: should we screen them for specific diseases at the entry medical status? Sophie Durieux-Paillard - Switzerland HIV and viral hepatitis information needs among migrants from sub-Saharan Africa in Germany Claudia Santos-Hövener - Germany Pilot study of a group intervention for unaccompanied refugee minors with symptoms of PTSD in Sweden Anna Sarkadi - Sweden

Fri 3rd Mental health 4.M. Oral presentations: Isolation, adversity and connectiveness in childhood 8:30-9:30 Chairperson(s): Auke Wiegersma - The Netherlands

Room K13 Childhood adversity & risk for suicide: A cohort study of 548721 Swedish adolescents & young adults Kyriaki Kosidou - Sweden Only the lonely? All-cause mortality among children without siblings and children without friends Ylva B Almquist - Sweden Activities organised by Dutch Care Sport Connectors (CSC) and reach of the target population Gerard Molleman - The Netherlands The role and impact of Care Sport Connectors in connecting the care and physical activity sector Annemarie Wagemakers - The Netherlands A 4-way decomposition analysis of poor social relations and depressive symptoms over the life-course Christopher Bean - Sweden

49 TIME, LOCATION TRACK PARALLEL SESSION 4 AND ORGANISER Fri 3rd Child and 4.N. Oral presentations: (Mis)behaviour in adolescents 8:30-9:30 adolescent Chairperson(s): Kirsi Wiss – Finland, Silja Kosola - Finland public health Room K23 Follow-up of adolescent electronic cigarette use in Finland, Jaana Kinnunen - Finland Is cannabis use among young people in Sweden related to socioeconomic status? Isabella Gripe - Sweden New psychoactive substances: the use and the associated health and social harm in Telford and Wrekin Mzwandile Mabhala - United Kingdom The Impact of Media Drug Prevention Campaigns on Youth Behaviors in Three Arab States Nadine Abdallah - Lebanon Network, school and country variations in adolescents’ health behaviour: a network analysis Vincent Lorant - Belgium

Fri 3rd Diet and 4.O. Pitch presentations: Nutrition - from childhood to providers 8:30-9:30 physical activity Chairperson(s): Franz Piribauer - Austria

Room T2 Breast milk feeding practices and dietary intake at 3 years of age in children born very preterm Raquel Mara Teixeira - Portugal Using behavioural insights to improve the healthiness of children’s packed lunches Jessica Jackson - United Kingdom Like father, like son? Similarities in child and parental food intake, Henna Vepsäläinen - Finland A reinforcement- and modelling-based fruit and vegetable intervention with 1st graders in Norway Magnus Haakens - Norway Nutritional intake and contribution of foods to nutrient inadequacy – the Portuguese Dietary Survey Lopes - Portugal Oral health and adherence to national dietary guidelines in France, Valentina Andreeva - France Friday 3 November

MAIN CONFERENCE The experiences of a large health service food retailer in implementing a healthy food policy Tara Boelsen-Robinson - Australia Community catering – thinking outside the box, Manuela Reiter - Austria

Fri 3rd Public health 4.P. Oral presentations: Population based studies 8:30-9:30 monitoring and Chairperson(s): Hans Van Oers - The Netherlands reporting Room T4 Enriching census data by combining health survey data using multiple imputation: Concept testing Linsay Gray - United Kingdom What do early life deaths contribute to the lifespan variation gap? A population based study Rosie Seaman - Germany Road traffic crashes in Swedish older adults using zolpidem or zopiclone – population-based studies Alicia Nevriana - Sweden Interim results of EUPHA network members’ s survey on Public Health Genomics, Annalisa Rosso - Italy

50 TIME, LOCATION TRACK PARALLEL SESSION 4 AND ORGANISER Fri 3rd Public 4.Q. Oral presentations: Sexual health: sex work and sexuality 8:30-9:30 health and Chairperson(s): Arja Aro - Denmark occupational Room K15 health First HIV/STIs behavioral survey among sex workers in Switzerland: SWAN 2016 (Sex Workers ANswers) Stéphanie Lociciro - Switzerland Syndemic ill health and community resilience among gay, bisexual and other men who have sex with men Lisa Mcdaid - United Kingdom Physical violence based on SOGIE among sexual and gender minorities: a systematic review Blondeel - Belgium Self-concealment, discrimination, and mental health among sexual and gender minorities in Macedonia Sasha Zhou - United States Discrimination and mental health among sexual and gender minorities in Macedonia Kristefer Stojanovski - United States

TIME, LOCATION TRACK POSTER WALKS AND ORGANISER MAIN CONFERENCE Friday 3 November Fri 3rd Poster walks 1 4.R. Poster walk: Health promotion in different settings 8:30-9:30 Chairperson(s): Julian Mamo - Malta

T foyer 4.R.1 Success and failure of the National Childhood Measurement Programme in England Sonia Saxena - United Kingdom 4.R.2 Cost-offset analysis of parenting interventions to prevent externalizing behavior problems Camilla Nystrand - Sweden 4.R.3 Improving reproductive health of Roma women, Rosana Janevska - Macedonia 4.R.4 Lifestyle counseling in primary care – the views of family physicians in United States and Sweden Helene Johansson - Sweden 4.R.5 Association of body composition with quality of life in adult patients on hemodialysis Sobiya Sawani - Pakistan 4.R.6 Application` analysis of protocols about duties of the nurse in intensive care units /ICUs/ Gergana Petrova - Bulgaria 4.R.7 Involvement of primary care professionals in a population based colorectal cancer screening programme, Saloa Unanue - Spain 4.R.8 Focusing on everyday life with Addison’s disease: Health promotion and secondary prevention Emelie Mälstam - Sweden 4.R.9 Self-reported modifiable lifestyle risk factors in pharmacy customers: 2-years of follow-up Sonja Milovanovic - Italy 4.R.10 The effect of one year of free school fruit in elementary school on FV intake, 15 years later . Kjersti Hovland Rennestraum - Norway 4.R.11 The effect of school fruit on weight status in two generations - 15 years of follow-up Eline Tveter - Norway 4.R.12 The creative use of social meida by students for public health improvement, Guy Collins - United Kingdom 4.R.13 Recommendations for reducing marketing foods to children, Mojca Gabrijelcˇicˇ Blenkus - Slovenia 4.R.14 Jerusalem community-academic partnership: an evaluation framework for health promotion projects, Vered Kaufman Shriqui - Israel 4.R.15 Public health in the municipalities . Work at the local level, Grete Eide Rønningen - Norway

51 TIME, LOCATION TRACK POSTER WALKS AND ORGANISER Fri 3rd 4.S. Poster walk: Evaluation of innovation 8:30-9:30 Chairperson(s): Marleen Bekker - EUPHA (PHPP)

T foyer 4.S.1 Assessing the value of community health programmes using a Social Return on Investment framework, Colin Baker - United Kingdom 4.S.2 eRegistries: clinical registries to support women’s and children’s health, Ingrid Friberg - Norway 4.S.3 Evaluating the innovation «Coping groups» at GPs as arena for health activism, Heidi Kvalvaag - Norway 4.S.4 The impact of telemedicine in reducing onset to treatment time in the management of acute stroke Marianna D'andrea - Italy 4.S.5 Distance learning training in genetics and genomics practices for Italian physicians Giovanna Elisa Calabrò - Italy 4.S.6 Rhetoric or reality: an ethnographic study on the use of Lean in imaging pathway implementation Maria Kordowicz - United Kingdom 4.S.7 Evaluation of an FASD Prevention Campaign Using Pregnancy Test Dispensers in Alaska and the Yukon, Ryan Ray - United States 4.S.8 Child Health Informatics – a Neglected Area of European E-Health Activity Michael Rigby - United Kingdom 4.S.9 Economic evaluation of a preventative strategy for autosomal dominant polycystic kidney disease Jose Luis Navarro Espigares - Spain 4.S.10 The place of scoping reviews in the evidence based medicine explained with the help of an example Alba Fishta - Germany 4.S.11 Heater cooler and Mycobacterium chimaera, Daniele Rosadini - Italy 4.S.12 Vaccinations and School Teachers: an explorative survey, Matteo Ricco - Italy 4.S.13 Lessons from implementation of ‘community based use of Misoprostol tablets to prevent PPH, in India’, Rakesh Parashar - India 4.S.14 Network levels and Public health potential: the case –study of PNH an hematologic rare disease Fabiana Rubba - Italy Friday 3 November

MAIN CONFERENCE 4.S.15 Prevalence and predictors of spontaneous smoking cessation at the first trimester of pregnancy Barbara Figueiredo - Portugal

TIME, LOCATION TRACK PLENARY SESSION AND ORGANISER Fri 3rd Plenary 3: A paradox of public health leadership: towards resilience in the context of 9:40-10:40 vulnerability

Victoria Hall Moderators: Katarzyna Czabanowska, ASPHER and Anna Cichowska Myrup, WHO EURO

ASPHER and Speakers/panellists: WHO EURO Elina Hemminki, Finland Darren Shickle, United Kingdom Caity Jackson, Women in Global Health Natasha Azzopardi Muscat, EUPHA André van der Zande, The Netherlands

52 TIME, LOCATION TRACK PARALLEL SESSION 5 AND ORGANISER Fri 3rd Communities 5.A. Oral presentations: From access, to pathways to person centered care 11:10-12:10 and Chairperson(s): Carlo Favaretti - EUPHA (HTA) environment Room K11 Unmasking the corporatization of global public health: Analysis of the role of venture philanthropy Suzanne Babich - United States Compromising solidarity towards cancer and cerebral palsy patients in Bulgarian health system Gena Grancharova - Bulgaria Is research a barrier to health service delivery? An ethnographic study of imaging pathways Maria Kordowicz - United Kingdom Economic analysis of a person-centered care intervention in head and neck oncology Hanna Gyllensten - Sweden A cross-sectional study on the use of clinical correspondence in Latin American healthcare networks M Luisa Vázquez Navarrete - Spain Fri 3rd Public health 5.B. Oral presentations: Evidence into policy 11:10-12:10 policy Chairperson(s): Michael Moore - Australia MAIN CONFERENCE Room T3 An overview on health services research in France between 2010 and 2015, Marine Spaak - France Friday 3 November Health System Performance Assessment, Hungary: a step forward toward evidence-informed health policy Balázs Babarczy - Hungary Evaluating the impact of a national diabetes risk assessment and screening programme in England Raffaele Palladino - United Kingdom Measuring, reporting and improving quality of ambulatory care: an international comparison Elke Berger - Germany The use of figures in the recent Dutch policy debate on health and healthcare: a discourse analysis Reinie Gerrits - The Netherlands Fri 3rd Health 5.C. Workshop: Animating the SDGs: experience of applying interlinkages for Global Health 11:10-12:10 information and Chairperson(s): Peter Friberg - Sweden communication Room K24 A healthy future in SIGHT, Peter Friberg - Sweden Understanding SDG interactions of the water and health nexus, Sarah Dickin - Sweden SIGHT Global Child Health in the era of the Sustainable Developments Goals: How can Sweden best contribute? Tobias Alfvén - Sweden Climate and Health: challenges and opportunities, Elisabet Lindgren - Sweden Fri 3rd Healthy living 5.D. Pitch presentations: Disease and work capacity 11:10-12:10 Chairperson(s): Alba Fishta - Germany

Room T6 A systematic review of existing ICF-based instruments measuring functioning and/or participation Femke Abma - The Netherlands Changes in risky alcohol use and sickness absence, Marianna Virtanen - Finland Trajectories and characteristics of work incapacity before and after suicide attempt in young adults Mo Wang - Sweden Unity in diversity: employer experiences and needs regarding workers with cancer across 9 countries Angelique De Rijk - The Netherlands Addressing individual and community impact of mass unemployment: a public health response framework Mariana Dyakova - United Kingdom

53 TIME, LOCATION TRACK PARALLEL SESSION 5 AND ORGANISER Pain and exit routes from paid employment among British civil servants: a follow-up study 1985-2013 Jaana Halonen - Finland Job demand, control and social support as predictors of trajectories of depressive symptoms Julia Åhlin - Sweden An alternative framework for obesity intervention: Insights from the "size acceptance" programme Lada Timotijevic - United Kingdom Fri 3rd Health 5.E. Pitch presentations: Risk factors in educational settings 11:10-12:10 promotion Chairperson(s): Guido Van Hal – Belgium, Bert Cornelius, The Netherlands

Room K22 Validity of Strengths and Difficulties Questionnaire in non-clinical samples of parents and teachers Anton Dahlberg - Sweden Peer2Peer - A consultation program for psychosocial crises and health promotion for medical students Magdalena Czernin - Austria Internet addiction among Croatian university students, Maja Miskulin - Croatia Perceptions and attitudes about the sale and promotion of sugar-sweetened beverages in a university Elly Howse - Australia Religious coping and resilience among students of medical sciences, Forouzan Rezapur Shahkolai - Iran Sexual health and contraception . A three years survey on Italian students’ knowledge and behaviours Lucia Lesa - Italy Knowledge, attitudes and behaviors about prevention of HPV infections: preliminary results Valentina Mascaro - Italy Testing for Chlamydia trachomatis - a "safe approach" to "unsafe sex", Anna Nielsen - Sweden Fri 3rd Health services 5.F. Workshop: Empowering cost accounting for strategic health system decision-making: 11:10-12:10 Patient Encounter Costing Chairperson(s): Philip Anderson - United States Room K16 Friday 3 November MAIN CONFERENCE Patient Encounter Costing (PEC): A better cost accounting system for healthcare systems Emergency Jonathan Slutzman - United States Medicine The SHARP database: Connecting diverse clinical datasets with administrative data to improve system International efficiency, Thomas Wallenfeldt - Sweden at Brigham Patient Encounter Costing (PEC) enables system-wide care improvement, Zayed Yasin - United States and Women’s Hospital Fri 3rd Health services 5.G. Pitch presentations: Active Ageing, Preventable Mortality, Injury Prevention: medicines 11:10-12:10 research Chairperson(s): Anne Lounamaa - EUPHA (INJ)

Room T5 Impact of NCD policies on ischaemic heart disease and premature NCD mortality change in Europe Belgin Unal - Turkey BelPHG-21: a pilot study on genetic variability in the Belgian population, Tine Descamps - Belgium A pilot project to develop community-centred public health practice examples, England, UK Jane South - United Kingdom Three 'success stories' of public health interventions in Slovenia, Tit Albreht - Slovenia An investigation of the impact of ‘Facilitation Skills for Health and Well-Being’ training, Paula Carroll - Ireland Comparison Autism diagnosis by developmental screening and Modified Checklist for Autism in Toddlers Orly Kerub - Israel

54 TIME, LOCATION TRACK PARALLEL SESSION 5 AND ORGANISER Fri 3rd The health 5.H. Oral presentations: Work, disabilities and death 11:10-12:10 workforce Chairperson(s): Kristina Alexanderson - Sweden

Room K12 Measuring the burden of injury across Europe, Ronan Lyons - United Kingdom Stressful life events and disability pension due to musculoskeletal diagnoses: a Finnish twin study Sanna Kärkkäinen - Finland Ichemic heart disease and common mental disorders and the risk of disability pension Ellenor Mittendorfer Rutz - Sweden Occupational trajectories and suicide: analysis of data from the GAZEL cohort study Marine Azevedo Da Silva - France Labour-market marginalisation after mental disorders among young natives/immigrants living in Sweden Magnus Helgesson - Sweden Fri 3rd Infectious 5.I. Pitch presentations: Immunization in a changing Europe 11:10-12:10 diseases Chairperson(s): Carlo Signorelli – Italy, Jo McCarthy – United Kingdom

Room K14 A measles outbreak in the London Borough of Hammersmith and Fulham, September–November 2016 MAIN CONFERENCE Neha Shah - United Kingdom Friday 3 November Response to a booster dose after primary HBV immunization: Preliminary results, Rosa Papadopoli - Italy Determinants for anti-meningococcal vaccination during extraordinary and optional campaign in Italy Samuele Rivolta - Italy Measles control strategies in health care setting: lessons from an outbreak in Rome, Italy 2017 Caterina Bianchi - Italy Coverage and influencing determinants of influenza vaccination in elderly patients in Poland Maria Ganczak - Poland Is the on site flu vaccination among health care workers effective? A Italian teaching hospital case Andrea Barbara - Italy Identifying elderly with low vaccine uptake using social deprivation indices: a systematic review Vladimir Vukovic - Italy Attitudes towards vaccinations in the National Immunization Program among parents in Sweden 2016 Emma Byström - Sweden Fri 3rd Chronic diseases 5.K. Pitch presentations: Prevention and treatment of cardiovascular diseases 11:10-12:10 Chairperson(s): Amal Khanolkar - United Kingdom

Room T1 Stress and cardiovascular risk in police . A systematic review, Nicola Magnavita - Italy Hypertension awareness and control among the elderly in Albania: social and community factors Catherine Pirkle - United States Impact of lifestyle intervention in cardiovascular prevention: are physical activity advices enough? Paolo Campanella - Italy Profile of Risk Factors for Non-Communicable Diseases in Albania: Results of national program "Si je" Klodian Rjepaj - Albania Light-moderate alcohol consumption and risk of atrial fibrillation, Katalin Gemes - Sweden Trends in access to stroke units and early case fatality in France – 2009-2014, Olivier Grimaud - France Impact of NCD policies on change in blood pressure and cholesterol in the WHO European Region Belgin Unal - Turkey Ideal Cardiovascular Health among Ghanaian residence in Europe and Ghana: The RODAM study Charles Agyemang - The Netherlands

55 TIME, LOCATION TRACK PARALLEL SESSION 5 AND ORGANISER Fri 3rd Migrant and 5.L. Pitch presentations: Migrant health: settlement and adaptation 11:10-12:10 ethnic minority Chairperson(s): Bernie Hannigan - United Kingdom health Room K21 Hypertension in Sub-Saharan African migrants in Europe and non-migrants in Africa – The RODAM study Charles Agyemang - The Netherlands Improving understanding of food choices and dietary changes among migrants in host countries Aravinda Berggreen-Clausen - Sweden Childhood obesity in minority ethnic children: developing a cultural sensitive health promotion tool Bertha Ochieng - United Kingdom Post-Traumatic Stress Disorders in homeless migrant women in the Paris region, Mathilde Roze - France Changes in migrants’ access and in quality of healthcare during the Spanish economic crisis . MEISI M Luisa Vázquez Navarrete - Spain Increasing burden of geriatric syndromes among foreign born older Swedes, Yajun Liang - Sweden Introduction to migration and health, experiences from a training program, Thor Indseth - Norway The process of culture in implementation research: linking the clinic and the community in Stockholm Helle Mölsted Alvesson - Sweden Fri 3rd Mental health 5.M. Workshop: Mental Health and Climate change 11:10-12:10 Chairperson(s): Jutta Lindert - EUPHA (PMH), Marija Jevtic - EUPHA (ENV)

Room K13 Environmental Disasters and Stress Related Disorders – Challenges to Build Resilience Jutta Lindert - EUPHA (PMH) EUPHA (PMH) Perspective on Children’s public mental health and climate change, Peter Van Den Hazel - EUPHA (ENV) (ENV) Mental Health & the role of mindset in Climate Change issues, Marija Jevtic - EUPHA (ENV) Fri 3rd Child and 5.N. Oral presentations: Lifestyle in childhood and adolesence 11:10-12:10 adolescent Chairperson(s): Sonia Saxena - United Kingdom public health

Friday 3 November Room K23 Mainstream print media representations of childhood obesity in the United Kingdom and Sweden MAIN CONFERENCE Amy Nimegeer - United Kingdom Risk for disordered eating in youth and long-term health outcomes, Evelina Landstedt - Sweden Children as active citizens within resilient and healthy communities, Elise Sijthoff - The Netherlands Parental gambling is associated with adolescents’ attitude to gambling, Camilla Lion - Italy Does parental monitoring buffer against alcohol use: a longitudinal study among Finnish adolescents Pirjo Lindfors - Finland Fri 3rd Diet and 5.O. Oral presentations: Diet across the life course 11:10-12:10 physical activity Chairperson(s): Alessandra Lafranconi – Italy

Room T2 Perceived child eating behaviours and maternal migrant background, Maria Somaraki - Sweden Young people's views on non-broadcast advertising of foods high in fat, sugar and salt Stephanie Chambers - United Kingdom Candy day’ in Finland and its association to consumption of sweets in 3- to 6-year-old children Laura Korpipää – Finland European women with low education consume as much fruit as men with high education Tonje Holte Stea - Norway Assessment of water, minerals end vitamins intakes during pregnancy in the Micro-IMAGE Study Marie-Pierre Sauvant-Rochat - France

56 TIME, LOCATION TRACK PARALLEL SESSION 5 AND ORGANISER Fri 3rd Public health 5.P. Oral presentations: Population health data 11:10-12:10 monitoring and Chairperson(s): Anjum Memon - United Kingdom, Luís Guedes - Portugal reporting Room T4 Improving health democraty: the first national inpatient-reported experience measure in France Damien Sainte-Croix - France When was your last blood pressure measurement by a health professional? Population data from Germany Hannelore Neuhauser - Germany Do high participation rates improve effects of population-based general health checks? Anne Mette Bender - Denmark How much information is there in annual cause of death statistics? The Netherlands example Marianna Mitratza - The Netherlands Projecting causes of deaths in The Netherlands, an envelope approach, Marjanne Plasmans - The Netherlands

Fri 3rd Public 5.Q. Oral presentations: Women's and reproductive health 11:10-12:10 health and Chairperson(s): Arja Aro - Denmark occupational

Room K15 health MAIN CONFERENCE

End user involvement in developing and field-testing a contraceptive online decision aid Friday 3 November Claudia Van Der Heijde - The Netherlands Factors influencing women’s contraceptive decision-making in Albania, Florida Doci - Canada Differential effects on birth weight of smoking patterns of low-income Irish pregnant women Catherine Hayes - Ireland Consanguineous marriage and the mental health of progeny: a population-wide data-linkage study Aideen Maguire - United Kingdom Universal or focused screening of partner violence in the health care services among young women Nihaya Daoud - Israel

TIME, LOCATION TRACK POSTER WALKS AND ORGANISER Fri 3rd Poster walks 1 5.R. Poster walk: The health of adolescents and young adults 11:10-12:10 Chairperson(s): Danielle Jansen - EUPHA (CAPH)

T foyer 5.R.1 Elevhalsoportalen .se: How Swedish schools utilize a novel student health promotion webtool Sebastian Hökby - Sweden 5.R.2 PTSD in adolescents – factors explaining resilience and risk - a systematic review Silvia Florescu - Romania 5.R.3 Mental health across two generations –A cohort-study among 10,716 Danish adolescents Merete Labriola - Denmark 5.R.4 Relationship between oral health and oral health related quality of life among child workers Filiz Abacigil - Turkey 5.R.5 The pleasant sides of aging: Photo contest for youngsters to promote positive attitude towards aging, Lisa Weidinger - Austria 5.R.6 Assessing the dimensionality of YFHS-Swe; a new questionnaire to assess youth friendliness Mazen Baroudi - Sweden 5.R.7 Resilience, accessibility of alcohol, alcohol refusal skills and alcohol use among early adolescents Beata Gajdosova - Slovakia 5.R.8 Perceived stress among adolescents is socially determined, Merete Labriola - Denmark

57 TIME, LOCATION TRACK POSTER WALKS AND ORGANISER 5.R.9 "Inexperienced"? Exploring patterns in sexual activities among urban poor young adolescents Anna Kågesten - Sweden 5.R.10 Qualitative evaluation of a group intervention for unaccompanied refugee minors with PTSD symptoms, Anna Sarkadi - Sweden 5.R.11 Differences in the WHO-5 well-being index among Swedish adolescents with and without impairments 2017, Carina Persson - Sweden 5.R.12 STI-testing among German, Hungarian and Austrian medical students: a multicenter study Henna Riemenschneider - Germany 5.R.13 Do teachers’ perceptions of effectiveness of a Danish physical activity programme depend on context? Julie Dalgaard Guldager - Denmark

Fri 3rd Poster walks 2 5.S. Poster walk: Health behaviour 11:10-12:10 Chairperson(s): Els Maeckelberghe - The Netherlands

T foyer 5.S.1 The INHERIT framework: integrating sustainability, health and behaviour to guide and evaluate action, Nina Van Der Vliet - The Netherlands 5.S.2 Inter-sectoral opportunities for protecting the environment, promote health and health equity Brigit Staatsen - The Netherlands 5.S.3 Inequalities in developmental disorders occurrence in children in aspect of air pollution exposure Agata Piekut - Poland 5.S.4 Impact of air pollution on respiratory diseases in urban areas: a systematic review Daniele Ignazio La Milia - Italy 5.S.5 A new approach to environmental health education in the framework of Erasmus+ Program in Kazakhstan, Almira Manatova - Kazakhstan 5.S.6 Quality criteria of generation playgrounds, Frank Michael Amort - Austria 5.S.7 Stakeholder engagement to promote urban health equity: the Turin case study . Giuseppe Costa - Italy Friday 3 November MAIN CONFERENCE 5.S.8 Observer rating of neighborhood environment: the Cyprus Neighbourhood Observation Tool (Cy-NOTes) Nicos. Middleton - Cyprus 5.S.9 Time to dismiss the idea of a structural fix? Insights for Health in All Policies Ditte Heering Holt - Denmark 5.S.10 Terrorist attacks in urban settings: citizens as key enabler of collective resilience Evika Karamagioli - Greece 5.S.11 Social cohesion mediates the association between urban greenspace and mental health in youth Donka Dimitrova - Bulgaria 5.S.12 A guide for intersectoral policy action to promote active mobility by community design Tanja Bruechert - Germany 5.S.13 Socioeconomic variations in exposure to environmental, nutritional and life-style risks in Russia Irina Ilchenko - Russia 5.S.14 Cancon: a systematic review on physical activity promotion in Europe .Which is the best strategy? Alessandra Sinopoli - Italy

58 TIME, LOCATION AND ORGANISER JOIN THE NETWORKS Fri 3rd - 12:10-13:40 - Room T3 - EUPHA (HPMR) Public health monitoring and reporting: Join the network Fri 3rd - 12:10-13:40 - Room T6 - EUPHA (PHPP) Public health practice and policy: Join the netword Fri 3rd - 12:10-13:40 - Room K24 - EUPHA (CAPH) Child and adolescent public health: Join the network Fri 3rd - 12:10-13:40 - Room K22 - EUPHA (CHR) Chronic diseases: Join the network Fri 3rd - 12:10-13:40 - Room T5 - EUPHA (HIA) Health impact assessment: Join the network Fri 3rd - 12:10-13:40 - Room K15 - EUPHA (HTA) Health technology assessment: Join the network Fri 3rd - 12:10-13:40 - Room K12 - EUPHA (IDC) Infectious diseases control: Join the network Fri 3rd - 12:10-13:40 - Room K14 - EUPHA (INJ) Injury prevention and safety promotion: Join the network Fri 3rd - 12:10-13:40 - Room K21 - EUPHA (MIG) Migrant and ethnic minority health: Join the network Fri 3rd - 12:10-13:40 - Room T2 - EUPHA (EPI) Public health epidemiology: Join the network Fri 3rd - 12:10-13:40 - Room T4 - EUPHA (SGMH) Sexual and gender minority health: Join the network

Fri 3rd - 12:10-13:40 - Room T1 - EUPHA (HWR proposed) Health workforce research: Join the network MAIN CONFERENCE Friday 3 November Fri 3rd - 12:10-13:40 - Room M10 - EUPHA (PHG) Public health genomics: Join the network Fri 3rd - 12:10-13:40 - Room K23 - EUPHA (HP) Health promotion: Join the network

TIME, LOCATION AND ORGANISER LUNCH SYMPOSIUM Fri 3rd 12:30-13:30 Lunch Symposium: Social Impact Bonds: driving innovation in healthcare and social services

Room K11

Health Navigator Fri 3rd 12:30-13:30 Lunch Symposium: A fresh take on policy for pharmaceutical research: ensuring access to medical innovation and tackling medical gaps Room K16

Federal Ministry of Health and Women’s Affairs, Austria

TIME, LOCATION AND ORGANISER PLENARY SESSION Fri 3rd 13:40-14:40 Successful health innovation: from the 'what' to the 'how'

Victoria Hall Moderator: Rafael Bengoa, Spain

WHO EURO, Observatory and Speakers/panelists: TO-REACH consortium Walter Ricciardi, Italy Josep Figueras, Observatory Hans Kluge, WHO EURO Natasha Azzopardi Muscat, EUPHA Anna Korotkova, Russian Federation

59 TIME, LOCATION TRACK PARALLEL SESSION 6 AND ORGANISER Fri 3rd 6.A. Late breaker: To care or not to care: health systems under pressure 14:50-15:50 After Obamacare: where does the US stand? Scott Greer - United States Room K11 The National Health Service in the UK, John Middleton - United Kingdom Discussion, Walter Ricciardi - Italy

Fri 3rd Public health 6.B. Oral presentations: Strengthening resilience in communities through public health 14:50-15:50 policy Chairperson(s): Birger Forsberg - Sweden, Mariëlle Beenackers - The Netherlands

Room T3 Evaluating the value for money of an integrated health and wellbeing service in County Durham, UK Nick Walton - United Kingdom A qualitative investigation into the broader impacts of a 12-week community based activity programme Aisling Keohane - Ireland An investigation of a community based physical activity intervention for adult men, ‘Men on the Move’ Liam Kelly - Ireland Transport-related walking and cycling among adults in Germany . Results from the EHIS wave 2 Jonas D. Finger - Germany Children for traffic safety in Slovenia, Tatjana Krajnc Nikolic´ - Slovenia

Fri 3rd Health 6.C. Oral presentations: Ferenc Bojan: Young investigator award session 14:50-15:50 information and Chairperson(s): Julian Mamo - Malta, Alastair Leyland - United Kingdom communication Room K24 Socio-demographic inequalities in the effectiveness of England’s NHS Health Check Kiara Chang - United Kingdom Community participation in health services development: A systematic review on outcomes Victoria Elizabeth Haldane - Singapore Harvesting the wisdom of the crowd: creating insight in regional care experiences using web ratings Friday 3 November MAIN CONFERENCE Roy Hendrikx - The Netherlands Socioeconomic inequalities and outcomes in diabetes: some evidence from Europe Beatriz Rodriguez-Sanchez - The Netherlands Thyroid cancer incidence around the Belgian nuclear sites, 2006-2014, Claire Demoury - Belgium

Fri 3rd Healthy living 6.D. Pitch presentations: Social security systems and health 14:50-15:50 Chairperson(s): Angelique De Rijk - The Netherlands

Room T6 The Obamacare impact: States that provide for accessible health insurance have lower suicide rates Karlijn Roex - Germany Bulgarian health insurance system through the prism of public health ethics, Silviya Yankulovska - Bulgaria Patient access and quality of primary care in Bulgaria – lessons from the QUALICOPC study Nikolai Hristov - Bulgaria Socioeconomic inequalities in health care utilisation in Indonesia: a cross-sectional study Joko Mulyanto - The Netherlands The impact of New Deal on health: An epidemiological framework, Gregori Galofre Vila - Italy Health component of the social package in Armenia: a cross-sectional survey of beneficiaries Hratchia Lylozian - Armenia Education of midwives in Bulgaria in the context of the European regulation, Silviya Yankulovska - Bulgaria

60 TIME, LOCATION TRACK PARALLEL SESSION 6 AND ORGANISER Fri 3rd Health 6.E. Pitch presentations: Health risks and response in school settings 14:50-15:50 promotion Chairperson(s): Sonia Saxena - United Kingdom

Room K22 Children learn, children do! Results of "Planning Health in School", a behavioural-change programme Margarida Vieira - Portugal Health promotion and preventive care in schools: a success story behind PISA scores, Silja Kosola - Finland Measuring health promotion capacity building in schools – Finnish comprehensive schools as an example Kirsi Wiss - Finland The role of collective efficacy in school and neighborhood contexts in adolescent alcohol use Minoru Takakura - Japan Use of the school setting during the summer holidays: formative process evaluation of ‘Food and Fun’ Kelly Morgan - United Kingdom Factors explaining maternal educational level differences in preschoolers’ intake of sugary products Elviira Lehto - Finland Psychometric analysis of Age and Stages Questionnaire: Social-Emotional (ASQ:SE) among 3-year-olds Masoud Vaezghasemi - Sweden Unsafe induced abortion; a case study of secondary school girls in Igunga district- Tanzania, Hamida Nkata -

Portugal MAIN CONFERENCE Friday 3 November Fri 3rd Health services 6.F. Oral presentations: The patient trajectory 14:50-15:50 Chairperson(s): Peter Schröder-Bäck - EUPHA (ETH)

Room K16 Proximity vs quality . Access to health services on the example of EBRT hospital deliveries in Poland Barbara Wie˛ckowska - Poland Blaylock risk assessment screening score as a predictor of length of hospital stay, Lucia Kundisova - Italy One-year survival after acute myocardial infarction (AMI): the effect of care pathway in Italy Martina Ventura - Italy Colon surgery: does the "bundle" approach reduce the surgical site infection risk? Angelo D'ambrosio - Italy Patient motives in emergency departments – evidence from Tyrol, Silvia Angerer - Austria Fri 3rd Health services 6.G. Oral presentations: Accounting for context 14:50-15:50 research Chairperson(s): Tek-Ang Lim - EUPHA (ECO)

Room T5 WAVE: 10 years of Wellbeing And Vitality in Education in South Canterbury, New Zealand Daniel Williams - New Zealand Ethnic density, social capital and mental health in Stockholm, Charisse Johnson - Sweden Fair distribution of the social determinants of health in Norwegian municipalites, Susanne Hagen - Norway Contextual correlates of happiness in European adults - the SPOTLIGHT study, Joreintje Mackenbach - The Netherlands Fri 3rd The health 6.H. Oral presentations: Occupational health issues 14:50-15:50 workforce Chairperson(s): Monika Mensing - Germany

Room K12 The impact of a workplace health screening programme on the health practices of Irish farmers Diana Van Doorn - Ireland Does paid vacation leave predict depression in working Americans?: A national longitudinal analysis Daniel Kim - United States Gender-specific predictors for paid work of young persons with disabling health conditions Sandra Brouwer - The Netherlands Identifying a gender leadership and management gap in EU academic health centres, Ellen Kuhlmann - Sweden Socioeconomic position and mortality from brain tumour – A Swedish national cohort study Amal Khanolkar - United Kingdom

61 TIME, LOCATION TRACK PARALLEL SESSION 6 AND ORGANISER Fri 3rd Communities 6.I. Oral presentations: Homelessness and marginalization 14:50-15:50 and Chairperson(s): Arjan van der Star - EUPHA (SGMH) environment Room K14 Comparative health survey of the Hungarian homeless population, Emese Nagy-Borsy - Hungary Morbidity and housing 10-years after shelter use, a study of homeless men in Helsinki, 2004-2010 Agnes Stenius-Ayoade - Finland, Healthy diet for homeless people, Zsuzsa Rakosy - Hungary International comparison of loneliness trajectories and its determinants: ELSA and SHARE studies Jitka Pikhartova - United Kingdom Syringe-Exchange program in Swiss prisons: two decades later, Sanda Samitca - Switzerland

Fri 3rd Chronic diseases 6.K. Pitch presentations: Cancer; risk factors and consequences 14:50-15:50 Chairperson(s): Piedad Martin-Olmedo - Spain

Room T1 Cancer care: reducing waste and increasing value, Valentina Chiesa - Italy Association between dietary patterns and hrHPV infection: a cross-sectional study in Sicily, Italy Martina Barchitta - Italy Dietary pattern in late life and risk of breast cancer, Alfheidur Haraldsdottir - Iceland Integrating physical activity into the cancer care pathway, an example from Aberdeen, Scotland Josefine Emilia Björkqvist -United Kingdom Motivational differences on mammography screening among American Indian/Alaska Native women Eleni Tolma - Kuwait Prostate cancer patients’ experiences, negative effects of treatments, and impact on well-being Ulla-Sisko Lehto - Finland Early life dietary pattern and risk of monoclonal gammopathy of undetermined significance Marianna Thordardottir - Iceland Survival, recurrence and second primary malignancies in HNC cancer: a multicentre study Roberta Pastorino - Italy Friday 3 November MAIN CONFERENCE Fri 3rd Migrant and 6.L. Pitch presentations: Migrant and health services 14:50-15:50 ethnic minority Chairperson(s): John M Cachia - Malta health Room K21 European refugee crisis: mapping barriers and implementing strategies to ensure access to health care Antonio Chiarenza - Italy Health Systems Responses to the Refugee Crises in Europe and Southeast Asia: A Qualitative Study Fiona Chuah - Singapore Asylum seekers morbidity and use of healthcare services in Finland, 2015-2016 Pirre Emilia Räisänen - Finland Caesarean birth frequency among women with and without migration background in Germany Celine Miani - Germany Impact of migration background on the uptake of antenatal care: the BaBi birth cohort study, Germany Celine Miani - Germany Psychiatric care utilisation among migrants and Swedish born, Euan Mackay - Sweden Use of antibiotics among adults in Turkey and Turkish migrants in Germany, The Netherlands and Sweden Hilal Ozcebe - Turkey Empowering Effects of Peer-to-Peer Refugee Health Awareness Program REFUGIUM on Health Facilitators Christine Faerber - Germany

62 TIME, LOCATION TRACK PARALLEL SESSION 6 AND ORGANISER Fri 3rd Mental health 6.M. Workshop: Psychological resilience - concepts, data and challenges for further research 14:50-15:50 Chairperson(s): Jutta Lindert - EUPHA (PMH), Johan Bilsen - Belgium

Room K1 Neurobiological mechanisms of psychological resilience - a conceptual framework, Oliver Tüscher - Germany Psychological resilience in refugees – a systematic review, Jutta Lindert - EUPHA (PMH) EUPHA (PMH) Mental health promotion competencies in the health sector, Nina Tamminen - Finland Associated factors with Post traumatic stress and anxiety disorders in first responders following terror attacks in Paris, January 2015, Lyderic Aubert - France

Fri 3rd Child and 6.N. Oral presentations: Smoking and alcohol use in adolescence 14:50-15:50 adolescent Chairperson(s): Luís Saboga Nunes - EUPHA (HP) public health Room K23 How effective is a Danish social norms intervention in reducing pupils alcohol perceptions and use? Lotte Vallentin-Holbech - Denmark Schoolwork attitudes and difficulties predicting adolescents’ smoking – a longitudinal study Jaana Minkkinen - Finland MAIN CONFERENCE

Adolescents’ smoking motivations across genders: a study of 7 European cities, Adeline Grard - Belgium Friday 3 November Smoking prevention programs: including local contexts in smoking motivations analysis . Adeline Grard - Belgium What kind of social norms messages work in adolescents? Lessons learned from The GOOD life program Christiane Stock - Denmark

Fri 3rd Diet and 6.O. Oral presentations: Nutrition and social determinants 14:50-15:50 physical activity Chairperson(s): Catherine Hayes - Ireland, Tonje Holte Stea - Norway

Room T2 The impact of the Great Recession on diet habits in Portugal, 2005-2014, Ricardo Alves - Portugal Household characteristics and nutritional vulnerability of people using UK food banks Rachel Loopstra - United Kingdom Socioeconomic patterning of food and drink advertising at transport stops in Edinburgh, UK Tony Robertson - United Kingdom Food blogs on Facebook and communication strategies: a new recipe for healthy nutritional messages Elena Olivero - Italy Potential health impacts of processed meat taxation: a quantification study from Germany Johanna Schoenbach - Germany

Fri 3rd Public health 6.P. Oral presentations: Public health team mechanisms 14:50-15:50 monitoring and Chairperson(s): Ronald Batenburg - The Netherlands reporting Room T4 The Family Health Nurse in Italy: essential or unimportant to primary care? Robin Thomas - Italy The rules for intersectoral policy processes in the Swiss national policy on global health arena Catherine M. Jones - Canada The impact of Baby-Friendly Hospital designation on duration of breastfeeding in Switzerland Julia Dratva - Switzerland Improving the quality and impact of public health tweeting in Scotland: #ScotPublicHealth Douglas Mackenzie - United Kingdom Mobilising various levers of team commitment: the experience of a quality contest in Burundi Anne Fromont - Belgium

63 TIME, LOCATION TRACK PARALLEL SESSION 6 AND ORGANISER Fri 3rd Public 6.Q. Workshop: Optimization of cancer screening programs 14:50-15:50 health and Chairperson(s): Roger Henriksson - Sweden occupational Room K15 health Implementing new screening tests: the case of switching from gFOBT to FIT in the colorectal cancer screening program of Stockholm-Gotland, Sven Törnberg - Sweden RCC Stockholm- Applying new evidence and recommendations: introducing primary HPV-based screening Gotland, Swedish Charlotta Sävblom - Sweden Cancer Society HPV self-sampling to reach high-risk groups in cervical screening: evidence from a randomized trial in Stockholm, Miriam Elfström - Sweden

TIME, LOCATION TRACK POSTER WALKS AND ORGANISER Fri 3rd Posterwalk 1 6.R. Poster walk: Work and sickness absence 14:50-15:50 Chairperson(s): Gunnel Hensing - EUPHA (SSH)

T foyer 6.R.1 Low social support and 16-years risk of cardiovascular diseases in Russian female population Dmitriy Panov - Russia 6.R.2 Norwegian Function Assessment Scale: Functional ability among employees with and without impairment, Sylvia Jankowiak - Germany 6.R.3 Disability and Family formation, Fredinah Namatovu - Sweden 6.R.4 Inability to work fulltime and its associations with diagnosis among disability benefit claimants Henk-Jan Boersema - The Netherlands 6.R.5 Social phobia in adolescence, sickness absence and unemployment: a prospective twin study Jurgita Narusyte - Sweden Friday 3 November MAIN CONFERENCE 6.R.6 Operationalization of the ICR framework within vocational rehabilitation: a scoping review Anne-Mette Hedager Momsen - Denmark 6.R.7 Labour market integration of young adults with disabilities, Angela Rauch - Germany 6.R.8 Validation study of the Danish version of the Readiness for Return to Work Scale Christina Malmose Stapelfeldt - Denmark 6.R.9 paid and unpaid working hours among Swedish men and women in relation to depressive symptoms Paraskevi Peristera - Sweden 6.R.10 Healthy behaviours and health functioning: a follow-up study among middle-aged employees Jouni Lahti - Finland 6.R.11 Sickness absence and temporary employment in Sweden, Malin Josephson - Sweden 6.R.12 Common mental disorders and sickness absence: a register-linkage study among Finnish employees Elina Mauramo - Finland 6.R.13 The role of a Rehabilitation Coordinator in returning to work–A Randomised Control Trial Anne-Marie Norén - Sweden 6.R.14 Estimating the number of informal caregivers in one region of Switzerland: a population-based study, Arnaud Chiolero - Switzerland 6.R.15 Obesity and Smoking among Truck Drivers: What is the French situation? Loïc Josseran - France

64 TIME, LOCATION TRACK POSTER WALKS AND ORGANISER Fri 3rd Poster walk 2 6.S. Poster walk: Burning tobacco and drug issues 14:50-15:50 Chairperson(s): Orkan Okan - Germany

T foyer 6.S.1 Health behaviours as a predictor of quitting hazardous alcohol use - A cohort study Eleonor Säfsten - Sweden 6.S.2 Effects of a school-based drug prevention program in Brazil: a latent transition analysis approach Juliana Valente - Brazil 6.S.3 Heavy episodic drinking and smoking among adults in Germany . Results from the EHIS wave 2 Cornelia Lange - Germany 6.S.4 Analysis on the Feasibility of Developing Adolescent Tobacco Refusal Skills Hui-Ping Lin - Taiwan 6.S.5 Resilience mediates the association between authenticity and alcohol use among male students Lucia Hricova - Slovakia 6.S.6 Effectiveness of universal drug prevention program with respect to self-control Maria Bacikova-Sleskova - Slovakia 6.S.7 Autonomy in relation to alcohol use and motivation to alcohol use: A prevention perspective MAIN CONFERENCE

Jozef Benka - Slovakia Friday 3 November 6.S.8 Tobacco and anti-tobacco advertisement in Poland, 1989-2000, Mateusz Zatonski - United Kingdom 6.S.9 Effectiveness of program Unplugged for drug use prevention among Slovak schoolchildren Olga Orosova - Slovakia 6.S.10 Country differences in past trends in alcohol-attributable mortality in Europe Sergi Trias-Llimós - The Netherlands 6.S.11 Barriers experienced by professionals in conversations with addicted parents about their child Margreet Van Der Meer - The Netherlands 6.S.12 Ponderal index of infants of smoking mothers: a Murmansk County Birth Registry study Olga Kharkova - Russia 6.S.13 Organisational actors who engage in Scottish e-cigarette policy debates: A mixed methods approach, Shona Hilton - United Kingdom

TIME, LOCATION TRACK PARALLEL SESSION 7 AND ORGANISER Fri 3rd Communities 7.A. Workshop: How to make health promotion in migrant populations work; practical 16:20-17:50 and experience in Stockholm county environment Chairperson(s): Knut Lönnroth - Sweden, Helena Holmgren - Sweden Room K11 Inequalities in health in Stockholm County, Bo Burström - Sweden Public healthcare Health promotion in primary care in disadvantaged areas in Stockholm, Feryal Messö Elias Bolos - Sweden services admin, Rinkeby extended home visiting program to first-time parents - child health services and social services in Sll collaboration, Johanna Mellblom - Sweden Health communicators reaching immigrants in Stockholm county . Sofie Bäärnhielm -Sweden

Fri 3rd Public health 7.B. Workshop: Public health, then, now and in the future: 25 years of EUPHA 16:20-17:50 policy Chairperson(s): Dineke Zeegers Paget - EUPHA, Louise Gunning-Schepers - The Netherlands

Room T3 Alastair Leyland - United Kingdom Maaike Droogers - EUPHA EUPHA Aaron Reeves - United Kingdom

65 TIME, LOCATION TRACK PARALLEL SESSION 7 AND ORGANISER Fri 3rd Health 7.C. Workshop: Energy transition as a challenge for public health 16:20-17:50 information and Chairperson(s): Peter Van Den Hazel - EUPHA (ENV), Marija Jevtic - EUPHA (ENV) communication Room K24 Energy transition as a challenge for public health, Marija Jevtic - EUPHA (ENV) Choose Health - How we can stop fueling disease, Vijoleta Gordeljevic - Belgium EUPHA (ENV) Perspective on children’s public health and energy transition, Peter Van Den Hazel - EUPHA (ENV)

Fri 3rd Healthy living 7.D. Workshop: Toward a definition of Good Practices in Public Health: state of the art and 16:20-17:50 different experiences Chairperson(s): Silvio Brusaferro - Italy, Iveta Nagyova - EUPHA (CHR) Room T6 Developing and sharing good/best practices in Public Health services: lessons from Patient Safety EUPHA (PR) experience, Pierfrancesco Tricarico - Italy (CHR) (HTA) Panel: (IDC) Anja Koornstra - The Netherlands Carlo Favaretti - EUPHA (HTA) Ellen Kuhlmann - Sweden Gini Van Rijckevorsel - The Netherlands

Fri 3rd Health 7.E. Workshop: School tobacco policies and adolescents smoking: a cross-comparative 16:20-17:50 promotion European study Chairperson(s): Vincent Lorant - Belgium, Anton Kunst - The Netherlands Room K22 School tobacco policies and adolescents’ smoking: a realist review, Michael Schreuders - The Netherlands SILNE-R What works and how in the implementation of school tobacco policies: A realist review Consortium Anu Linnansaari - Finland School staff experiences on implementing school tobacco policies: an interview study, Anu Linnansaari - Finland

Friday 3 November The evolution of school tobacco policies and smoking on school premises, Nora Mélard - Belgium MAIN CONFERENCE School tobacco policies, complex contagion and smoking inequalities among adolescents: a longitudinal study in seven European cities, Pierre-Olivier Robert - Belgium

Fri 3rd Health services 7.F. Workshop: Out-of-pocket costs in Europe and their effects on health-care use 16:20-17:50 Chairperson(s): Judith de Jong - EUPHA (HSR) Room K16 Revisiting OOP Requirements: Trends in Spending, Burden, and Policy, Ewout Van Ginneken - Germany EUPHA (HSR), Increased OOP and changes in noncompliance with specialty referrals in The Netherlands Observatory Thamar van Esch - The Netherlands Fri 3rd Health services 7.G. Skills building seminar: Promoting health literacy to facilitate informed decision-making 16:20-17:50 research by developing fact boxes Chairperson(s): Roman Prinz - Room T5 Germany Harding Center Promoting health literacy to reduce health inequalities in societies, Christin Ellermann - Germany for Risk Literacy, Risk Comprehension and Communication - Insights from current grievances and ways to resolve them Max Planck Insti- Roman Prinz - Germany tute for Human Evidence-based health information enabling informed decision-making, Jana Hinneburg - Germany Development

66 TIME, LOCATION TRACK PARALLEL SESSION 7 AND ORGANISER Fri 3rd The health 7.H. Workshop: The sustainability agenda: actions required to maximise impact across 16:20-17:50 workforce countries and regions Chairperson(s): Piroska Ostlin - WHO EURO, Silvio Brusaferro - Italy Room K12 The United Nations Sustainable Development Goals-SDGs: the WHO European road map on the WHO EURO, implementation of the SDGs and global progress to-date, Bettina Menne - WHO EURO WHO RHN Big changes in a small country – the Welsh experience of legislating for Sustainable Development Catherine Weatherup - United Kingdom

Panel Natasha Azzopardi Muscat - EUPHA Jonas Frykman - Sweden Knut-Johan Rognlien - Norway Peter Beznec - Slovenia MAIN CONFERENCE Fri 3rd Infectious 7.I. Workshop: Storytelling - A powerful tool for infectious disease prevention Friday 3 November 16:20-17:50 diseases Chairperson(s): Karl Ekdahl - ECDC, Aura Timen - EUPHA (IDC) Room K14 Storytelling makes public health statistics more accessible, Martine Bouman - The Netherlands ECDC, EUPHA Introduction of new vaccines: How can storytelling help? Kari Johansen - ECDC (IDC), RIVM Film and video as ‘evidence’ in a post-fact society, Heidi Larson - United Kingdom

Fri 3rd Chronic diseases 7.K. Workshop: Systematic population based targeted CVD prevention in primary care is effective! 16:20-17:50 Chairperson(s): Margareta Kristenson - Sweden, Mats Hellstrand - Sweden Room T1 Background and development of the Västerbotten Intervention Programme (VIP), Lars Weinehall - Sweden Swedish HPH Health dialogues in the Counties of Skaraborg and Jönköping, Hans Lingfors - Sweden Network, Theme VIP - structure and support . And why Cochrane evaluations of CVD prevention programs not are applicable group Targeted on this Swedish concept for CVD prevention, Margareta Norberg - Sweden health dialogues HEalth economic evaluation of the Västerbotten Intervention Programme, Lars Lindholm - Sweden

Fri 3rd Migrant and 7.L. Workshop: Monitoring the health of asylum seekers in Europe 16:20-17:50 ethnic minority Chairperson(s): Päivikki Koponen - Finland health Room K21 Is health the right of every child: health reception of asylum-seeking children in Denmark Amina Barghadouch - Denmark TERTTU project Monitoring the health and the nutritional status of asylum seekers in Norway, Laura Terragni - Norway group, THL Developing the health examination protocol for asylum seekers in Finland: A national development project (TERTTU), Natalia Skogberg - Finland The health of asylum seekers in Germany: surveillance, monitoring and research-driven approaches Kayvan Bozorgmehr - Germany Health of asylum seekers – using GeoSentinel data as a resource, Patricia Schlagenhauf - Switzerland

67 TIME, LOCATION TRACK PARALLEL SESSION 7 AND ORGANISER Fri 3rd Mental health 7.M. Round table: The role of music in sustaining resilient and healthy communities? 16:20-17:50 A Nordic perspective Chairperson(s): Lars Ole Bonde - Denmark Room K13 Music and public health – empirical studies in Sweden, Töres Theorell - Sweden Aalborg Health differences between non-musicians, amateur and professional musicians – a Danish study University Ola Ekholm - Denmark The Health Musicking Program - new approach to promoting health and quality of life in local contexts Kari Bjerke Batt-Rawden - Norway Promoting inter-generational meetings between young people and senior citizens - using internet based music videos, Eva Bojner Horwitz - Sweden Are playing instruments, singing or creating theatre good for health? Associations with self-related health and all cause mortality in the HUNT3 Study (2006-08), Norway, Bente Irene Løkken - Norway

Fri 3rd Child and 7.N. Workshop: The 'Health Literacy in Childhood and Adolescence' research consortium 16:20-17:50 adolescent (HLCA): empirical findings public health Chairperson(s): Orkan Okan - Germany, Luís Saboga Nunes - EUPHA (HP) Room K23 Health literacy in childhood and adolescence: particularities in available understandings EUPHA (HP), Janine Bröder - Germany Bielefeld Health literacy of fourth grade students: preliminary findings from a classroom survey University Torsten Michael Bollweg - Germany Development process of a health literacy measurement tool for adolescents: qualitative findings Olga Domanska - Germany Mental health literacy of teachers and social workers: qualitative interviews and in-depths findings Friday 3 November

MAIN CONFERENCE Dirk Bruland - Germany The Media Protect project: first results of the process evaluation,Eva Maria Bitzer - Germany

Fri 3rd Diet and 7.O. Workshop: Physical activity, healthy ageing and equity: insights from the AEQUIPA 16:20-17:50 physical activity research network Chairperson(s): Hajo Zeeb - Germany Room T2 Obstacles and drivers to community-based physical activity promotion for older adults BIPS Dirk Gansefort - Germany Shaping active communities by joint action of public health and urban planning, Tanja Bruechert - Germany Participatory development of a community-based outdoor physical activity program Karin Bammann - Germany Facilitating physical activity in older individuals with IT-assisted interventions, Sonia Lippke - Germany Understanding and monitoring equity impacts of physical activity interventions for older adults Gesa Lehne - Germany

68 TIME, LOCATION TRACK PARALLEL SESSION 7 AND ORGANISER Fri 3rd Public health 7.P. Round table: Global health and Data for Decision Making 16:20-17:50 monitoring and Chairperson(s): Kevin Mccarthy - European Commission - EuropeAid, Jaap Koot - The Netherlands reporting Room T4 Developing data visualisation tools and training health managers in using real-time information for decision-making in Bangladesh, Jannetul Ferdous - Bangladesh DG DEVCO Developing community-based information tools strengthening community involvement in health EuropeAid, EC Athuman Chiguzo - Kenya Developing health information systems for managing control programmes of non-communicable diseases Soe Myint Than - Myanmar

Fri 3rd Public 7.Q. Workshop: Designing an ERIC on health information to maximise research and 16:20-17:50 health and evidence-based policy-making occupational Chairperson(s): Herman Van Oyen - Belgium Room K15 health The European Research Infrastructure on Health Information for Research and Evidence-based Policy MAIN CONFERENCE

WIV-ISP Petronille Bogaert - Belgium Friday 3 November Generate knowledge: The European Core Health Indicators, Angela Fehr - Germany Manage Data and Analysis, Ronan Lyons - United Kingdom Capacity building through exchange and sharing of knowledge in European Health Examination Survey Hanna Tolonen - Finland How is European maternal and newborn health information translated into action? Marie Delnord - France

TIME, LOCATION TRACK POSTER WALKS AND ORGANISER Fri 3rd Poster walk 1 7.R. Poster walk: Social inequalities 16:20-17:50 Chairperson(s): Eric Breton - France

T foyer 7.R.1 A decision-guiding tool for choice of interventions to reduce social exclusion in municipalities Anni-Maria Pulkki-Brännström - Sweden 7.R.2 The Norwegian policy to reduce social inequalities in health: Comprehensive action or mixed signals? Elisabeth Fosse - Norway 7.R.3 A small-area analysis of health inequalities across the geodemographic area classification in Cyprus Demetris Lamnisos - Cyprus 7.R.4 An extended home visiting program in a multicultural suburb, fathers striving for stability K Tiitinen Mekhail - Sweden 7.R.5 Trends in educational inequalities in smoking among adolescents in Germany since the early 2000s Benjamin Kuntz - Germany 7.R.6 Unmet need for mental health care: a population-based study on gender inequalities in Sweden Sara Olsson - Sweden 7.R.7 (Dis)advantaged childhoods and premature mortality: cumulative inequalities over the life-course Josephine Jackisch - Sweden 7.R.8 Estimating social inequality in mortality and life expectancy in absence of register data in Germany Jens Hoebel - Germany

69 TIME, LOCATION TRACK POSTER WALKS AND ORGANISER 7.R.9 Risk of disability pension in first and second generation immigrants, Domitilla Di Thiene - Sweden 7.R.10 Barriers Thematic Map (BTM) to Gender Equality in Healthcare, Valia Kalaitzi - Greece 7.R.11 Indices used to measure inequalities in health related studies among South Asian urban population Sohana Shafique -Bangladesh 7.R.12 The association between social capital on health quality of life among adolescents Maria Nyholm - Sweden 7.R.13 Social inequalities in geriatric syndromes among community-dwelling older people Christian Rausch - Germany 7.R.14 Inequalities in access to health care in Estonia, Maria Filina-Kossatsova - Estonia 7.R.15 Healthy UCD – the healthy campus concept in Ireland, Patricia Fitzpatrick - Ireland

Fri 3rd Poster walk 2 7.S. Poster walk: Nutrition, body composition and maternal health 16:20-17:50 Chairperson(s): Mika Gissler - Finland

T foyer 7.S.1 Newborn screening programmes – need to consider parental awareness and knowledge Patricia Fitzpatrick - Ireland 7.S.2 Health professionals’ experiences and views of obstetric ultrasound in Rwanda, Sophia Holmlund - Sweden 7.S.3 Evaluation of a voucher scheme for low income pregnant woman and mothers in the UK Ruth Dundas - United Kingdom 7.S.4 An incomplete RCT of a low-cost, self-regulating tamponade for management of PPH in Bangladesh, Aminur Rahman - Bangladesh 7.S.5 A baby at any cost? Why Public health should address trends of assisted reproductive medicine Beate Wimmer-Puchinger - Austria 7.S.6 Knowledge and Perception about Food Adulteration Problem among School Children in Bangladesh Friday 3 November

MAIN CONFERENCE Iffat Haque - Japan 7.S.7 The educational gradient in food and nutrient intake in Belgium (BNFCS2014), Karin De Ridder - Belgium 7.S.8 Nothing fails like failure: Exploring factors that prevent overweight persons from losing weight Kjell Sverre Pettersen - Norway 7.S.9 Migraine and obesity: effect modification by gender and stress, Valentina Andreeva - France 7.S.10 The relationship between body mass index and Pittsburgh sleep quality index, Erkan Pehlivan - Turkey 7.S.11 Associations of physical activity, body mass index and cardiovascular risk in older Australian women Ka Man Li - Australia 7.S.12 Morbid obesity, bariatric surgery and occupational status: analysis from a prospective cohort study Matteo Ricco - Italy 7.S.13 Fruit and vegetable intake among urban palestinians and israelis – a cross sectional study Tamara Huseini - Israel 7.S.14 Health risk factors associated with meat, fruit and vegetable intake in cohort studies Giuseppe Grosso - Italy 7.S.15 Correcting the self-reported BMI doesn’t impact the socio-economic inequalities in obesity Sabine Drieskens - Belgium

70 TIME, LOCATION TRACK PARALLEL SESSION 1 AND ORGANISER Sat 4th Communities 8.A. Workshop: Urban environments: action for health and equity 8:30-10:00 and Chairperson(s): Elizabet Paunovic - WHO EURO, Francesco Zambon - WHO EURO environment Room K11 Urban environment as an opportunity for health, wellbeing and equity, Matthias Braubach - WHO EURO Investing in healthy urban environments – a pathway to sustainable development and equity WHO EURO, Mariana Dyakova - United Kingdom ECEH Panel: Margareta Forsberg - Sweden Knut-Johan Rognlien - Norway Marcus Grant - United Kingdom Ann Colles - Belgium Handan Türkogˇlu - Turkey Peter Beznec - Slovenia Sat 4th Public health 8.B. Workshop: Implementing the '-omics' evidences into precision prevention and 8:30-10:00 policy interventions programs Chairperson(s): Iveta Nagyova - EUPHA (CHR), Róza Ádány - EUPHA (PHG) Room T3 Prevention of chronic diseases in the genomic era, Iveta Nagyova - EUPHA (CHR) EUPHA (PHG) Genetic background behind the high prevalence of metabolic syndrome among Roma (CHR) Róza Ádány - EUPHA (PHG) Screening pathways for Lynch syndrome: a systematic review of the existing pathways and a cost-effectiveness analysis in Italy Stefania Boccia - Italy "Public Health Genomics in Cancer" in Cancer Control - Joint Action Policy Papers Marc Van Den Bulcke - Belgium Sat 4th Health 8.C. Round table: Civil Society governance for health: lessons from network coordination for 8:30-10:00 information and stronger health impacts communication Chairperson(s): Matthias Wismar - European Observatory, Monika Kosinska - WHO EURO Room K24 Strategies for working with society: what is it and what are the instruments and contexts Saturday 4 November

EUPH (PHPP) Scott Greer - United States MAIN CONFERENCE Observatory, Lessons from Russia: Civil Society and the Response to the HIV/AIDS Epidemic, Elizabeth King - United States WHO EURO Lessons from Turkey: Syrians under Temporary Protection, Health Services and NGOs Saime Ozcurumez - Turkey Lessons from Cyprus: Civil Society in Times of Austerity, Maria Joachim - United States Lessons from The Netherlands: Whole of Society governance in the ‘All about Health…’ program Marleen Bekker - EUPHA (PHPP) Sat 4th Healthy living 8.D. Workshop: The Fast Society and its impact on public health (research) 8:30-10:00 Chairperson(s): Natasha Azzopardi Muscat - EUPHA, Dineke Zeegers Paget - EUPHA

Room T6 How to bring evidence to the table in a post-truth society, Scott Greer (tbc) - United States Available for work 24/7: burn-out and other health consequences, Kristina Alexanderson - Sweden EUPHA Cyber-bullying and its impact on mental health, Jutta Lindert - EUPHA (PMH)

71 TIME, LOCATION TRACK PARALLEL SESSION 1 AND ORGANISER Sat 4th Health 8.E. Workshop: Advancing salutogenesis for health promotion and public health 8:30-10:00 promotion Chairperson(s): Georg F. Bauer - Switzerland, Jürgen M Pelikan - Austria

Room K22 Towards a theory of salutogenesis, Georg F. Bauer - Switzerland Further developing Aaron Antonovsky´s concept of health – a systems theory based proposal EUPHA (HP), Jürgen M Pelikan - Austria IUHPE Global Children & adolescents' Sense of Coherence and methodological related measurement issues Working Group Luís Saboga Nunes - EUPHA (HP) of Salutogenesis

Sat 4th Health services 8.F. Workshop: Building resilient health systems that can respond effectively to global health 8:30-10:00 challenges Chairperson(s): Martin McKee - United Kingdom, Dina Balabanova - United Kingdom Room K16 Conceptualising health system resilience and why it matters? Dina Balabanova - United Kingdom Health Systems The Ebola epidemic in Liberia: the role of communities and local leadership in overcoming catastrophe and Global building health system resilience, David Peters - United States Refugee migration to Germany: did the health system show resilience? Oliver Razum - Germany How trade in health services can strengthen and challenge health systems resilience? Johanna Hanefeld - United Kingdom Strengthening capacity through learning: competency-based health policy and systems research training Meike Schleiff - United States

Sat 4th Health services 8.G. Workshop: Patient Safety: Challenges and opportunities to keep sustainability in the 8:30-10:00 research continuum of care Chairperson(s): Paulo Sousa - Portugal, Anne Lounamaa - EUPHA (INJ) Room T5 Safety culture and/or safety climate in hospitals, how to measure? Johan Lund - Norway EUPHA (INJ) Patient Safety in different hospital settings: monitoring the state of the art through indicators and a EUPHA (PR) validated self-evaluation tool, Silvio Brusaferro - Italy Patient Safety and Communication - a National Survey in Germany, Kerstina Horch - Germany Health Information Systems (HIS)-induced patient safety incidents – experiences of physicians in Finland Persephone Doupi – Finland

Sat 4th The health 8.H. Workshop: Ageing society: implications for the workforce - an international perspective 8:30-10:00 workforce on worker health Chairperson(s): Ute Bültmann - The Netherlands, Gunnel Hensing - EUPHA (SSH) Room K12 Trends in labour participation rate and retirement age in citizens with and without chronic conditions in VU UMCA The Netherlands, Iris De Putter - The Netherlands Functional Health Decline Before and After Retirement: A Longitudinal Analysis of the Health and Retirement Study, Sander Van Zon - The Netherlands Determinants of early retirement among older workers with and without chronic disease: results from a

MAIN CONFERENCE Danish prospective study, Ranu Sewdas - The Netherlands Saturday 4 November Working life expectancy in good and poor perceived health among Dutch 55-65-year-old workers with chronic diseases, Astrid De Wind - The Netherlands

72 TIME, LOCATION TRACK PARALLEL SESSION 1 AND ORGANISER Sat 4th Infectious 8.I. Workshop: Climate change and mosquito-borne diseases: from A(edes) to Z(ika) and more! 8:30-10:00 diseases Chairperson(s): Aura Timen - EUPHA (IDC), Karl Ekdahl - ECDC

Room K14 Vectors of mosquito-borne viruses and their control in Europe, Jan Lundström – Sweden Climate change and other key drivers of mosquito-borne disease emergence, Jan Semenza - Sweden EUPHA (IDC), Preparedness for mosquito-borne diseases in Europe: the ECDC perspective, Jonathan Suk - Sweden ECDC, EUPHA Public health policies to adapt to climate change and changes in infectious diseases patterns (ENV) Peter Van Den Hazel - EUPHA (ENV)

Sat 4th Chronic diseases 8.K. Workshop: Social Inequalities in Ageing 8:30-10:00 Chairperson(s): Johan Fritzell - Sweden, Neda Agahi - Sweden

Room T1 The ageing populations in the Nordic countries: mortality and longevity from 1990-2014 Terese Sara Høj Jørgensen - Denmark Aging Research Socioeconomic Position Across the Life-Course and Cognitive Ability in Midlife, Rikke Lund - Denmark Center (ARC), Change and Stability: Trends in Health and Function Among the Oldest Old in Finland and Sweden Karolinska Stefan Fors - Sweden Institutet & Nordic eldercare – weak universalism becoming weaker? Marta Szebehely - Sweden Stockholm Market oriented health care reforms and equity in access in health care in the Nordic countries – impact University on the ageing population, Ilmo Keskimäki - Finland Sat 4th Migrant and 8.L. Workshop: Understanding and meeting the sexual and reproductive health services 8:30-10:00 ethnic minority among migrant women in Europe health Chairperson(s): Mika Gissler - Finland, Anna-Marie Nybo Andersen - Denmark Room K21 Induced abortions among migrant women in Finland 2001–2014, Mika Gissler - Finland ROAM, EUPHA Could co-production contribute to equitable contraceptive counselling among immigrants? Towards a (MIG) more equitable contraceptive counselling among immigrants from Middle East in Sweden Elina Larsson - Sweden Healthy migrant effect or artefact? The impact of the gestational age estimate method on birth outcome disparities between migrants and Swedes, Sol Juárez - Sweden What initiatives might improve perinatal health of migrant women and their children? Sarah Fredsted Villadsen - Denmark Saturday 4 November

Co-production and testing of a community genetic literacy intervention among a minority ethnic MAIN CONFERENCE community, Sarah Salway - United Kingdom Sat 4th Mental health 8.M. Workshop: Terrorist attacks and mental healthcare 8:30-10:00 Chairperson(s): Johan Bilsen - Belgium, Jutta Lindert - EUPHA (PMH)

Room K13 18 months impacts of January 2015 terrorist attacks in Paris on victims and first rescue’ mental health and social functioning, Cécile Vuillermoz - France EUPHA (PMH) Psychosocial impact among civilians exposed to the terrorist attacks of November 2015 in Paris Philippe Pirard - France Healthcare utilization in young survivors of a terrorist attack: lessons learned from the Utøya 2011 shooting, Lise Eilin Stene - Norway The relationship between perceived trauma, coping and health outcomes after the Brussels bombing Yori Gidron - Belgium

73 TIME, LOCATION TRACK PARALLEL SESSION 1 AND ORGANISER Sat 4th Child and 8.N. Workshop: Risk assessment in maternal and child health: what, when and how? 8:30-10:00 adolescent Chairperson(s): Minke Van Minde - The Netherlands, Marleen Hamoen - The Netherlands public health Room K23 What should be assessed? Medical and non-medical risk, the influence of the environment Jacqueline Lagendijk - The Netherlands Erasmus Medical When should we assess risk? Preconception and interconception care, Meertien Sijpkens - The Netherlands Center Examples of medical and non-medical risk assessments, Minke Van Minde - The Netherlands Early identification of children who are at increased risk of developing high blood pressure Marleen Hamoen - The Netherlands Evaluation of a risk screening project, example from early childhood intervention networks Petra Winkler - Austria

Sat 4th Diet and 8.O. Workshop: Healthy and Sustainable Diets for European Countries 8:30-10:00 physical activity Chairperson(s): Carl Lachat - Belgium

Room T2 Background and methodology, Natalie Rangelov - Switzerland The wider context for the Healthy and Sustainable Diets for European Countries' report . How should EUPHA (FN) EUPHA use this? Tim Lang - United Kingdom Methods and findings . Alessandra Lafranconi - Italy Natalie Rangelov - Switzerland Recommendations . Carl Lachat - Belgium The way forward . Sirpa Sarlio-Lähteenkorva - Finland

Sat 4th Public health 8.P. Workshop: Mapping legal requirements for HIA institutionalization across Europe 8:30-10:00 monitoring and Chairperson(s): Piedad Martin-Olmedo - Spain, Marleen Bekker - EUPHA (PHPP) reporting Room T4 Survey on HIA implementation across countries of the WHO European Region, Piedad Martin-Olmedo – Spain HIA in Austria – A Voluntary Instrument for Health in All Policies, Gabriele Gruber - Austria EUPHA (HIA) HIA in the Czech Republic, Jana Loosova - Czech Republic (PHPP) Health Impact Assessment (HIA) in Wales: From voluntary to statutory, Liz Green - United Kingdom What the decision making process really needs from health impact assessment Lea Bouwmeester - The Netherlands

Sat 4th Public 8.Q. Workshop: Mapping the European knowledge translation landscape: Insights from five 8:30-10:00 health and EVIPNet Europe members occupational Chairperson(s): Tanja Kuchenmueller - WHO EURO, Marleen Bekker - EUPHA (PHPP) Room K15 health Being part of EVIPNet Europe – Insights into the network’s benefits from the Republic of Moldova WHO EURO, Marcela Tirdea - Moldova EUPHA (HSR) Exploring the Kazakh evidence-informed policy-making landscape – Results of a situation analysis (SA) (PHPP) Vitaliy Koikov - Kazakhstan Setting the stage to institutionalize evidence-informed policy-making in Hungary: Drawing on the situation analysis (SA) to identify challenges and opportunities, Balázs Babarczy - Hungary Poland’s experiences with EVIPNet Europe’s knowledge translation (KT) tools – making use of synergetic

MAIN CONFERENCE effects, Barbara Wie˛ckowska - Poland Saturday 4 November Serving as catalyst for national health policy-making: The success story of the Estonian evidence brief for policy (EBP), Kristina Köhler - Estonia

74 TIME, LOCATION TRACK PARALLEL SESSION 1 AND ORGANISER Sat 4th 8.X. Workshop: How does the European Union contribute to its citizens' health? 8:30-10:00 Chairperson(s): Martin McKee - United Kingdom, Carlo Signorelli - Italy

Room K1 Health in EU legislation: an actual or conditional priority? Andrea Tognoni - Belgium EU instruments and competences that can positively impact on health, Anna Odone - Italy University of Health status of the European Union, Matthias Wismar - Observatory Parma, University Faltering trust in the European Union: what will it mean for health? David Stuckler - Italy Vita-Salute San Raffaele

TIME, LOCATION TRACK POSTER WALKS AND ORGANISER Sat 4th Poster walks 1 8.R. Poster walk: Mental health 8:30-10:00 Chairperson(s): Marija Jakubauskiene - Lithuania

T foyer 8.R.1 Comparison of South Korean antidepressant consumption with OECD European countries . Sun Jae Moon - Korea, South 8.R.2 Prevention of seasonal affective disorder: results of a survey in German-speaking countries Barbara Nussbaumer-Streit - Austria 8.R.3 Indicated preventive interventions for depression in Children and Adolescents: A meta-analysis Richard Ssegonja - Sweden 8.R.4 Depressive symptoms among land expropriated farmers: evidence from China, Yuji Mizushima - Japan 8.R.5 What explains the high mental distress score in young women in the Norwegian county pilot study? Heidi Lyshol - Norway 8.R.6 Utilization of antidepressants in Croatia: Is depression underdiagnose in primary care? Marina Polic-Vizintin - Croatia 8.R.7 School may be a key player in child mental health . Preliminary findings from a systematic review Solveig Petersen - Sweden 8.R.8 Mental health among older Irish adults: Act-Belong-Commit indicators promote subjective

wellbeing, Ziggi Ivan Santini - Denmark Saturday 4 November 8.R.9 Incidence of specialized service use for mental health related problems during adolescence increases MAIN CONFERENCE Mikko Marttila - Finland 8.R.10 Gender inequalities in common mental disorders over the life course, Annika Åhs - Sweden 8.R.11 Burn out in university students: an international multi-institutional study, Joel Ladner - France 8.R.12 Stress coping strategies, psychological distress and quality of life among hemodialysis patients Zahra Taheri-Kharameh - Iran 8.R.13 Differences in predictors of Subjective Well-Being among Roma and Non-Roma young adults in Serbia, Smiljana Cvjetkovic - Serbia 8.R.14 Social support and the accessibility to and regular participation in various types of activities Mari Nicholls Espetvedt - Norway 8.R.15 Mental Health Services Following a Natural Disaster Evacuation, Larry Svenson - Canada

75 TIME, LOCATION TRACK POSTER WALKS AND ORGANISER Sat 4th Poster walks 2 8.S. Poster walk: Migrant health 8:30-10:00 Chairperson(s): Allan Krasnik - EUPHA (MIG), Blerta Zenelaj - The Netherlands

T foyer 8 .S .1 Non-participation and infectious disease prevalence in a population based study among migrants Paula Tiittala - Finland 8.S.2 Health information for asylum seekers in transit centers in Norway Sonja Myhre - Norway 8.S.3 Depression and Low Labour Market and Social Expectations among Resettled Syrian Refugees in Sweden, Leah Okenwa Emegwa - Sweden 8.S.4 Communicable disease risks in European refugee populations since 2014 Charlotte Christiane Hammer - United Kingdom 8.S.5 Refugees experiences of health information in the civic orientation - Health literacy does matter Josefin Wångdahl -Sweden 8.S.6 Population mobility and Tuberculosis-HIV/AIDS co-morbidity rates in Armenia Nune Truzyan - Armenia 8.S.7 Individual determinants of integrated care for indigent patients: an experimental study in Brussels Pierre Smith - Belgium 8.S.8 ER access by foreign citizens between 1999 and 2014 in five large hospital of Rome, Italy Giuseppe Migliara - Italy 8.S.9 Transnational Living of Migrants with Dementia Hürrem Tezcan-Güntekin - Germany 8.S.10 Role of obesity in differences in cervical cancer screening rates by migration history (Constances) Gwenn Menvielle - France 8.S.11 Empowerment in sexual health for Sub-Saharan migrants in Paris: results from a community-based study, Anne Gosselin - France 8.S.12 Which anthropometric measures best indicate the risk for type 2 diabetes among migrants in Finland? Natalia Skogberg - Finland 8.S.13 Social determinants in dental health of young Chinese immigrant children in British Columbia, Canada, Hui Juan (chelsea) Gao - Canada 8.S.14 Ethnic differences in cardiovascular morbidity and mortality among breast cancer patients Charles Agyemang - The Netherlands

TIME, LOCATION TRACK PARALLEL SESSION 9 AND ORGANISER Sat 4th Communities 9.A. Skills building seminar: Reflecting on community practice in health promotion in Europe 10:10-11:10 and - where now? environment Chairperson(s): Jane South - United Kingdom Room K11 Understanding the theory and practice of a local capacity building programme, France, Eric Breton - France CHPR, EHESP Approaches to community engagement in health promotion practice in the UK

MAIN CONFERENCE Anne-Marie Bagnall - United Kingdom Saturday 4 November

76 TIME, LOCATION TRACK PARALLEL SESSION 9 AND ORGANISER Sat 4th Public health 9.B. Pitch presentations: Collating evidence in public health 10:10-11:10 policy Investing in sustainable health and well-being for the people of Wales – from evidence to action Room T3 Mariana Dyakova - United Kingdom The experience of the Portuguese National Institute of Health in the Joint Action CHRODIS Luciana Costa - Portugal What are the prisoners doing at the island? Liv Hanson Ausland - Norway Scope and patterns of under-reporting of vulnerable road users in official road accident statistics Monica Steiner - Austria Air pollution and health: study of the biological effects in children by buccal micronucleus assay Marco Verani - Italy Saharan dust intrusions in Spain: health impacts and associated synoptic conditions, Julio Diaz - Spain Different types of stroke relationship of meteorological factors by gender and age Vidmantas Vaiciulis - Lithuania Sources of indoor air pollution and health effects in the Italian and European schools, Alice Borghini - Italy

Sat 4th Health 9.C. Workshop: Building Resilience and promoting Well being 10:10-11:10 information and Chairperson(s): Jutta Lindert - EUPHA (PMH), Marija Jakubauskiene - Lithuania communication Room K24 Woodland improvements in deprived urban communities: how does this build resilience? Catharine Ward Thompson - United Kingdom EUPHA (PMH) Environments, resilience and mental health over the life course: findings from the UK Jamie Pearce - United Kingdom Promoting mental well-being in the ageing urban population: determinants, interventions and policies in European cities (MINDMAP), Mariëlle Beenackers - The Netherlands Building places and mental health – methodological challenges, Jutta Lindert - EUPHA (PMH)

Sat 4th Healthy living 9.D. Pitch presentations: Sickness absence 10:10-11:10 Chairperson(s): Gunnel Hensing - EUPHA (SSH), Annina Ropponen - Finland

Room T6 Length of sickness absence and sustained return to work: systematic review of the research literature Saturday 4 November Johanna Kausto - Finland MAIN CONFERENCE Trajectories of sickness absence duration in Catalonia (Spain) from 2012 to 2014 Laura Serra Saurina - Spain Physicians’ experiences with sickness absence certification in Finland,Katariina Hinkka - Finland Weight gain and subsequent diagnosis-specific sickness absence: A register-linked follow-up study Anna Svärd - Finland Does temporary work affect sickness absence duration? Monica Ubalde-Lopez - Spain Are time pressure and sleep problems due to thoughts about work risk factors for future sick leave? Pia Svedberg - Sweden Future work disability trajectories among people on a new sick-leave spell due to depressive episode Kristin Farrants - Sweden New episodes of back pain among employed people in primary care, sickness certification and rtw Øystein Hetlevik - Norway

77 TIME, LOCATION TRACK PARALLEL SESSION 9 AND ORGANISER Sat 4th Health 9.E. Pitch presentations: Drugs and alcohol 10:10-11:10 promotion Chairperson(s): Daniel Falkstedt - Sweden

Room K22 Inequalities in young adult frequency and quantity of alcohol use in a longitudinal Swedish sample Laura Wells - Sweden Methadone therapy adherence among homeless adults in a housing first trial in Vancouver, Canada Milad Parpouchi - Canada Evaluation study of the implementation of children-orientation in drug-counseling centers Kira Isabel Hower - Germany Unemployment and heavy episodic drinking from adolescence to midlife in Sweden and Finland Noora Berg - Finland The role of cocaine in several types of death: an Italian study, Gianmarco Troiano - Italy Local level alcohol policy interventions: experience of three municipalities, Maali Käbin - Estonia Monitoring substitution treatments: example of an internet plateform in Switzerland Pierre Simon-Vermot - Switzerland A practice-based perspective on the new legislation by prevention workers and health promoters Nicky Dirkx - Belgium

Sat 4th Health services 9.F. Pitch presentations: Primary care and shared decision making 10:10-11:10 Chairperson(s): Tek-Ang Lim - EUPHA (ECO)

Room K16 Perception of oral health behaviors of patients: a pilot-study applied in general practitioners Nélio Veiga - Portugal Improving physical activity and physical literacy at primary care level, Frank Michael Amort - Austria Attitude and practice of Dutch GPs concerning partner notification and treatment for chlamydia Gé Donker - The Netherlands Including patient preferences and applying guideline recommendations: a conflict? Anne Brabers - The Netherlands Use Clinical Decision Supporting Systemin in China Community Hospitals, Ruizhi Shi - China Transnational ethical comparison: a dynamic learning opportunity . Kathy Mccoll - France The origins and developments of health promotion capacity-building, Vesa Saaristo - Finland The effects of public health policies on health inequalities in European welfare states Adam Todd - United Kingdom

Sat 4th Health services 9.G. Workshop: Primary prevention strategies in action 10:10-11:10 research Chairperson(s): Miriam Elfström - Sweden

Room T5 The Healthy School Start project, Liselotte Schäfer Elinder - Sweden The Botkyrka Projekt: Using peer leaders to build awareness about cancer and behavioral factors related RCC Stockholm- to cancer, Yvonne Wengström - Sweden Gotland, Swedish Physical activity during treatment for breast cancer: results from the OptiTrain study MAIN CONFERENCE

Saturday 4 November Cancer Society Yvonne Wengström - Sweden

78 TIME, LOCATION TRACK PARALLEL SESSION 9 AND ORGANISER Sat 4th The health 9.H. Oral presentations: Disease and risk of sickness absence 10:10-11:10 workforce Chairperson(s): Ellenor Mittendorfer Rutz - Sweden

Room K12 Cause-specific work disability before and after stroke: A population-based register study in Sweden Tea Lallukka - Finland Disposable Income of people with Multiple Sclerosis over time: A nationwide registry study in Sweden Chantelle Murley - Sweden Do brief alcohol interventions have impact on sick days? Results from a randomized controlled trial Jennis Freyer-Adam - Germany The Long-term financial consequences of breast cancer: a Danish registry-based cohort study Laura Jensen - Denmark The process from diagnosed cancer to sustainable work: An unexpected journey, Birgit Brusletto - Norway

Sat 4th Infectious 9.I. Pitch presentations: Infectious diseases 10:10-11:10 diseases Chairperson(s): Karl Ekdahl - ECDC

Room K14 Retrospective cohort study of lost to follow up predictors among TB patients in Yerevan, Armenia Serine Sahakyan - Armenia Meningococcal outbreak, cluster and hyperendemic: are we using the same language? Tea Burmaz - Italy Detection and evaluation of chronic hepatitis B and C patients who were lost to medical follow up Kirsten Wevers - The Netherlands Public risk perception of polio outbreaks in the Ukraine and implications for polio-free countries Sahar Hegazi - Switzerland Interventions and approaches to integrating HIV and mental health services: a systematic review Fiona Chuah - Singapore Cluster of acute flaccid paralysis in children following enterovirus D68 infection in Scotland Amir Kirolos - United Kingdom Infectious disease screening in asylum-seekers: range, coverage and economic evaluation in Germany Kayvan Bozorgmehr - Germany Ten years of microbiological surveillance on endoscopes, Gianmarco Troiano - Italy

Sat 4th Chronic diseases 9.K. Pitch presentations: Diabetes: from risk factors to therapeutic service 10:10-11:10 Chairperson(s): Alessandra Lafranconi – Italy Saturday 4 November MAIN CONFERENCE Room T1 The map of diabetes and its determinants within the metropolitan area of Rome, Andrea Poscia - Italy Fasting plasma glucose related genetic variants show ethnic variation in Hungarian populations Szilvia Fiatal - Hungary Exposure to arsenic in tap water and gestational diabetes: a French semi-ecological study Cécile Marie - France Inequalities in childhood-onset type 2 diabetes management – A national cohort study Amal Khanolkar - United Kingdom Use of healthcare services among socially vulnerable diabetes patients in Copenhagen Ulla Christensen - Denmark Self-management perceptions among providers and non-European type 2 diabetes patients in Stockholm Juliet Aweko - Sweden Barriers to initiation of insülin in patients with type 2 diabetes based on health belief model Pinar Soylar - Turkey

79 TIME, LOCATION TRACK PARALLEL SESSION 9 AND ORGANISER Sat 4th Migrant and 9.L. Oral presentations: Health inequalities across regional and social strata 10:10-11:10 ethnic minority Chairperson(s): Judit Csiszar - United Kingdom health Room K21 Regional mortality in countries of Central and Eastern Europe: findings from Euro-Healthy project Hynek Pikhart - Czech Republic Early life socioeconomic position and deaths from cardiovascular diseases: examining the mechanisms Muhammad Zakir Hossin - Sweden Conceptualisations of health across social strata: a concept map-study Karien Stronks - The Netherlands Regional differences in the use of ill-defined causes of death in cardiovascular mortality Susanne Stolpe - Germany Comparing trends in health inequalities in Great Britain by different measures Gerry Mccartney - United Kingdom

Sat 4th Mental health 9.M. Pitch presentations: Violence 10:10-11:10 Chairperson(s): Nihaya Daoud - Israel

Room K13 Is there a relation between cannabis use and being a victim of violence in the general population? Els Pletinckx - Belgium Mapping training about Gender Based Violence in nurse education programmes in Spain Amaia Maquibar - Spain The frequency of domestic violence and the relevant Influential factors in adult women in Malatya Erkan Pehlivan - Turkey Childhood violence, and DNA methylation: a systematic review Vânia Rocha - Portugal Improving Gender Equality in a District of Turkey: An Interventional and Qualitative Study Pinar Okyay - Turkey Rape in Eastern Democratic Republic of Congo: a community survey among victims Mapendo Mutalegwa Koya - Switzerland Is subjective wellbeing associated with depression? A cross-sectional survey in southeast England Anjum Memon - United Kingdom Road user’s willingness to pay to reduce injury risk Mohamed Mouloud Haddak - France

Sat 4th Child and 9.N. Pitch presentations: Young people and future mental health 10:10-11:10 adolescent Chairperson(s): Johan Bilsen - Belgium public health Room K23 Increase of internalised mental health symptoms over the last 33 years among adolescents Anne Hammarström - Sweden Cumulative exposure to childhood adversity, and treated Attention Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder Kyriaki Kosidou - Sweden Improving basic care for youth with psychological complaints in Utrecht: an action-research approach Marja Van Bon-Martens - The Netherlands Childhood BMI trajectories and adolescence psychological well-being and physical health

MAIN CONFERENCE Yun Chen - Sweden Saturday 4 November Popping pills in medical school: Are competition and stress causing students to misuse stimulants? Sara De Bruyn - Belgium

80 TIME, LOCATION TRACK PARALLEL SESSION 9 AND ORGANISER Informing university students with mental health problems about actual health issues / treatments Claudia Van Der Heijde - The Netherlands Teachers' abilities to promote students' health whose parents have mental illness -survey results Dirk Bruland - Germany Associations between empowerment-enabling environments and self-rated health among adolescents Nina Simonsen - Finland

Sat 4th Diet and 9.O. Oral presentations: Obesity: epidemiology and policy 10:10-11:10 physical activity Chairperson(s): Liliana Orellana - Australia

Room T2 Maternal obesity, gestational weight gain, and offspring cognitive performance in adolescence Euan Mackay - Sweden Perception of different formats of front-of-pack nutrition labels s in a French population Chantal Julia - France Catalysing globesity? An analysis of the impact of Free Trade Agreements on caloric intake Pepita Barlow - United Kingdom Impact of obesity on trends in life expectancy among different European countries, 1975-2012 Nikoletta Vidra - The Netherlands Food consumption and nutrient intake during preschool hours and at home among Finnish preschoolers Liisa Korkalo - Finland

Sat 4th Public health 9.P. Pitch presentations: Public healthcare workforce: improving quality 10:10-11:10 monitoring and Chairperson(s): Kasia Czabanowska - ASPHER reporting Room T4 Quality of nursing home care: preliminary results from Tuscany region (Italy) Gianmarco Troiano - Italy Experiential training to improve quality of care for mothers and newborns at the time of birth Geeta Verma - India Alignment of competencies and job tasks among primary care managers Milica Dikic - Bosnia and Herzegovina Teaching students’ patient safety core competencies: results of an Italian program

Giulio Menegazzi - Italy Saturday 4 November Residents and incident reporting: 4 years experience in an Italian academic hospital MAIN CONFERENCE Claudio Battistella - Italy Patient satisfaction with healthcare provided by family doctors in Latvia Anita Villerusa - Latvia

Sat 4th Public 9.Q. Skills building seminar: Conquering the mountain: writing an institutional review board 10:10-11:10 health and proposal occupational Chairperson(s): Tjede Funk - Sweden, Peter Schröder-Bäck - EUPHA (ETH) Room K15 health Research Ethics Quiz EUPHAnxt and Els Maeckelberghe - The Netherlands EUPHA (ETH) Silviya Yankulovska - Bulgaria

81 TIME, LOCATION TRACK POSTER WALKS AND ORGANISER Sat 4th Poster walk 1 9.R. Poster walk: Health workforce 10:10-11:10 Chairperson(s): Ellen Kuhlmann - Sweden

T foyer 9.R.1 Satisfaction with Public Health Residency Program from the Perspective of Residents in Slovenia Matej Vinko - Slovenia 9.R.2 Folkhälsokollen - a new tool for displaying local public health data in Stockholm Joanna Stjernschantz Forsberg - Sweden 9.R.3 Interprofessional education in hypertension: foundation for a team-based care culture Valérie Santschi - Switzerland 9.R.4 Young Medical Residents’ Scientific Cooperation Made Easy - EuroNet Platform, Helene Rossinot - France 9.R.5 Development of a User-Friendly Self-Assessment Tool for Testing Community Medical Surge Capacity, Christopher Nelson - United States 9.R.6 Strategy for Safe & Disaster Resilient Communities in Lebanon: Critical Look via a Public Health Lens, Noor Jaber Chehayeb - Lebanon 9.R.7 What influences uptake of behavioural science by public health decision makers and practitioners? Kristina Curtis - United Kingdom 9.R.8 Development of a Public Health Preparedness Competency Model for EU Member States Stefano Guicciardi - Italy 9.R.9 Public health residents and internships in Europe – an analysis of EuroNet MRPH internship requests, Damir Ivankovic - Croatia 9.R.10 Assessment of level of social skills among Public Health students of Warsaw Medical University Joanna Gotlib - Poland 9.R.11 Integrating Public Health Education with the local Public Health Workforce Margaret Coffey - United Kingdom 9.R.12 A measurement scale for the psychological capital of medical staff in China, Elizabeth Reis - Portugal 9.R.13 Co-creating Future-oriented Health Promotion Study Programmes for Workforce Development Kairi Märk - Estonia 9.R.14 Public Health Wales International Health Strategy: Nationally Focused, Globally Responsible Jo Mccarthy - United Kingdom Sat 4th Poster walk 2 9.S. Poster walk: Mental health 10:10-11:10 Chairperson(s): Guido Van Hal - Belgium

T foyer 9.S.1 Prevention of Suicidal Behavior in prison: first Italian results, Gianmarco Troiano - Italy 9.S.2 Psychological symptoms in late adolescence and long-term risk of suicide and suicide attempt Carl Hogstedt - Sweden 9.S.3 Why are psychosomatic symptoms in young people increasing in Sweden? Petra Löfstedt - Sweden 9.S.4 Mental health and academic failure in Swedish adolescents, Helena Fabian - Sweden 9.S.5 Prevalence of depression in the offspring of people exposed to radiation in East Kazakhstan Almira Manatova - Kazakhstan 9.S.6 Mental health and school absenteeism in adolescents: A Swedish policy transfer approach Helena Honkaniemi - Sweden 9.S.7 The associations between emotional state, subjective well-being and quality of life in elderly women, Andrejus Cernovas - Lithuania 9.S.8 The perspective of families affected by parental mental illness on stigma and help-seeking MAIN CONFERENCE

Saturday 4 November Patricia Wahl - Germany 9.S.9 Physical multimorbidity and mental health in Italy, Paola Rucci - Italy

82 TIME, LOCATION TRACK POSTER WALKS AND ORGANISER 9.S.10 Resilience in people with schizophrenia . Results from the Italian Network for Research on Psychoses Paola Rucci - Italy 9.S.11 Ensuring optimal health care for people with mental health disorders, Danijela Stimac - Croatia 9.S.12 Family physicians’ awareness and use of cognitive impairment screening tests in Ankara, Turkey Ozge Karadag Caman - Turkey 9.S.13 ADHD medication in offspring of immigrants; Does the income level of the country of origin matter? Arzu Arat - Sweden 9.S.14 The Practice Nurse Mental Health in general practices: effects on diagnoses of alcohol abuse Dike Van De Mheen - The Netherlands 9.S.15 Refugee women, victims of GBV - which issues for the health care system? A qualitative study Mirjam Rodella Sapia - Switzerland

TIME, LOCATION TRACK PARALLEL SESSION 9 AND ORGANISER Sat 4th Communities 10.A. Workshop: Integration of health appraisal within urban planning and environmental 11:40-13:10 and impact assessments environment Chairperson(s): Odile Mekel - EUPHA (HIA), Arpana Verma - EUPHA (URB) Room K11 Integrating health in planning sectors in Wales: Developing a resource for practitioners, Liz Green - United Kingdom EUPHA (HIA) Integrated public health action planning instruments – experiences from North Rhine-Westphalia (URB) (ENV) Thomas Classen - Germany Screening health impacts as a vehicle to shape urban policies towards health-enabling policies János Girán - Hungary

Panel discussion Marcus Grant - United Kingdom Sat 4th Public health 10.B. Workshop: Quality strategies in European health systems 11:40-13:10 policy Chairperson(s): Dimitra Panteli - Germany

Room T3 Quality strategies in Europe: Frameworks and overview, Dimitra Panteli - Germany International governance and guidance for quality strategies in Europe, Willy Palm - Belgium Observatory, Health care quality in 15 OECD countries: policies and institutions, Niek Klazinga - The Netherlands Saturday 4 November

OECD, TU Berlin Public reporting as a quality strategy, Mirella Cacace - Germany MAIN CONFERENCE Sat 4th Health 10.C. Workshop: Lighting candles, not cursing the darkness, applications of health 11:40-13:10 information and information across Europe communication Chairperson(s): Anthony Staines - Ireland, Hanna Tolonen - Finland Room K24 Health system performance evaluation by integrating data across health and social care services Bridge-Health Unto Hakkinen - Finland Interoperability of data from research and surveillance:a pilot project for cardiovascular diseases Luigi Palmieri - Italy Data quality assurance approaches using administrative data in healthcare performance assessment Enrique Bernal-Delgado - Spain Monitoring Environmental impacts on population health, Anke Joas - Germany Making Children’s Lives Visible – Indicators of Health and Well-being for Children and Young People Sara Mc Quinn - Ireland

83 TIME, LOCATION TRACK PARALLEL SESSION 9 AND ORGANISER Sat 4th Healthy living 10.D. Skills building seminar: Fast and clear: how to present research findings in 3 minutes 11:40-13:10 to a non-scientific audience? Chairperson(s): Alberto Mateo - United Kingdom, Karolina Mackiewicz - Finland Room T6 Mariana Dyakova - United Kingdom EUPHAnxt, Hédinn Svarfdal Björnsson – Iceland EuroNet MRPH, YFG Sat 4th Health 10.E. Skills building seminar: Why, when, and how to explore stakeholder and 11:40-13:10 promotion implementation risks in complex health interventions Chairperson(s): Frans Feron - The Netherlands, Elisabeth Dorant - The Netherlands Room K22 Introduction on complexity and systems thinking in complex interventions Maastricht Elisabeth Dorant - The Netherlands University Stakeholder analyses in complex interventions, Theresia Krieger - The Netherlands Risk analyses in complex projects, Theresia Krieger - The Netherlands Developing implementation management instruments, Theresia Krieger - The Netherlands

Sat 4th Health services 10.F. Skills building seminar: Future research priorities for more innovative and accessible 11:40-13:10 health services and systems (TO-REACH) Chairperson(s): Walter Ricciardi - Italy, Natasha Azzopardi Muscat - EUPHA Room K16 The TO-REACH initiative: what does it aim and how can the public health community influence this? ISS, EUPHA Stefano Vella - Italy (HSR) Mapping and analysing shared priorities and gaps in research on tranfering innovations in Europe Johan Hansen - The Netherlands Case study on organisational innovations in France and their applicability for other countries Yann Bourgueil - France

Sat 4th Health services 10.G. Workshop: Primary care in the driving seat: how to create an integrated 11:40-13:10 research people-centred workforce? Chairperson(s): Ellen Kuhlmann - Sweden Room T5 Innovating skill mix to strengthen primary care in high- and middle-income countries EUPHA (HWR Irene Ariadne Glinos - Belgium proposed) Changing skill mix in the primary care workforce: a comparison across nine European countries and the patient experience, Christine Bond - United Kingdom Community orientation of general practitioners in 34 countries, Peter Groenewegen - The Netherlands The system leadership challenge facing the primary healthcare workforce, David Hunter - United Kingdom Comparing primary care workforce models in high-income countries: how health systems matter MAIN CONFERENCE

Saturday 4 November Ellen Kuhlmann - Sweden

84 TIME, LOCATION TRACK PARALLEL SESSION 9 AND ORGANISER Sat 4th The health 10.H. Round table: Public Health Leadership development: practice-oriented interactive 11:40-13:10 workforce follow up of plenary Chairperson(s): Dineke Zeegers Paget - EUPHA, Marleen Bekker - EUPHA (PHPP) Room K12 Practical workforce and leadership challenges in a regional health system, Silvio Brusaferro - Italy EUPHA (PHPP) Lessons from 25 years developing public health leaders in Lithuania, Mindaugas Stankunas - Lithuania (PR), WHO EURO, Contributions to leadership development in The Netherlands, Anja Koornstra - The Netherlands ASPHER International developments in support of national leadership development Kasia Czabanowska - ASPHER Anna Cichowska Myrup - Denmark

Sat 4th Chronic diseases 10.K. Workshop: Reducing health inequalities 11:40-13:10 Chairperson(s): Liselotte Schäfer Elinder - Sweden, Bo Burström - Sweden

Room T1 An extended postnatal home visiting programme in a disadvantaged area in Stockholm Bo Burström - Sweden Karolinska A Healthy School Start – parental support for prevention of obesity in disadvantaged areas in Sweden Institute Åsa Norman - Sweden A Healthy Generation – family support for a healthy lifestyle in disadvantaged areas Mai-Lis Hellenius - Sweden

Sat 4th Migrant and 10.L. Workshop: Health System responses to migration 11:40-13:10 ethnic minority Chairperson(s): Allan Krasnik - EUPHA (MIG), Oliver Razum - Germany health Room K21 Health system responses to migration: snapshot on practices in Europe, Elke Jakubowski - WHO EURO Migrant health in Denmark, Morten Sodemann - Denmark WHO EURO New Scots: Integrating Refugees into Scottish communities, Alison Strang - United Kingdom Training and accreditation of migrant healthcare personnel in Turkey, Line Neerup Handlos - Denmark Provision and financing of physical and mental health services for Refugees in Germany Saturday 4 November

Kayvan Bozorgmehr, Stefan Noest - Germany MAIN CONFERENCE

Sat 4th Mental health 10.M. Workshop: Terrorist attacks: perceived threat and societal approach 11:40-13:10 Chairperson(s): Johan Bilsen - Belgium, Jutta Lindert - EUPHA (PMH)

Room K13 ‘Feeling threatened’ and self-reported health after terrorist attacks in Belgium . Are we prone to ‘terrorification’? Reginald Deschepper - Belgium EUPHA (PMH) How to think about a terror attack and consequences for mental health, Trond Heir - Norway How can we trust to be safe in the aftermath of terror? Grete Dyb - Norway Post-traumatic stress symptoms and media exposure following the November 2015 Paris terror attacks Maëlle Robert - France

85 TIME, LOCATION TRACK PARALLEL SESSION 9 AND ORGANISER Sat 4th Child and 10.N. Workshop: Appraising Primary Care for children and adolescents in Europe? are we 11:40-13:10 adolescent measuring the right things? public health Chairperson(s): Danielle Jansen - EUPHA (CAPH) Room K23 ‘Models’ of Children’s Primary Care, Michael Rigby - United Kingdom MOCHA Project Approaches to Appraisal and Measurement, Michael Rigby - United Kingdom Child asthma treatment: a comparison of 30 EU and EEA countries based on a business model description Daniela Luzi - Italy How do European countries assess childcare? A comparison of 30 EU and EEA countries in the MOCHA project, Daniela Luzi - Italy Seeking a Holistic Matric of Strength of Primary Care for Children, Michael Rigby - United Kingdom

Sat 4th Diet and 10.O. Workshop: Responsible and healthy food demand and supply 11:40-13:10 physical activity Chairperson(s): Carl Lachat - Belgium, Susanna Kugelberg - WHO EURO

Room T2 Towards Sustainable Production & Consumption, Tim Lang - United Kingdom Sustainable Food Consumption- a focus for the Swedish National Food Agency Annica Sohlström - Sweden EUPHA (FN), En Garde food policy in GENT, Belgium, Katrien Verbeke - Belgium WHO EURO Panel and plenary discussion, Parul Sharma - Sweden

Sat 4th Public health 10.P. Workshop: The cutting edge of Health Technology Assessment: Information and 11:40-13:10 monitoring and Communication Technologies reporting Chairperson(s): Chiara de Waure - EUPHA (HTA), Peter Schröder-Bäck - EUPHA (ETH) Room T4 Why embedding Health ICT in daily practice is not that easy, Ilse Swinkels - The Netherlands EUPHA (HTA) Health ICT and HTA: towards synergy, Persephone Doupi - Finland (HSR) (ETH) Basic assumptions in RCTs contrasting empirical development of ICT? Alternative approaches for e-HTA Anne Granstrøm Ekeland - Norway Participation as a means or an end within HTA and ICT: lessons from a disability studies approach William Sherlaw - France

Sat 4th Public 10.Q. Workshop: Evaluating policy using natural experiments and quasi-experimental methods 11:40-13:10 health and Chairperson(s): Alastair Leyland - United Kingdom occupational Room K15 health Natural experiments and observational studies: where and how should we draw the line? Peter Craig - United Kingdom EUPHA (EPI) Quasi-experiments in public health and health systems research, Till Bärnighausen - Germany Evaluating the impact of pictorial health warnings on Italian smokers: before-after cohort study Giuseppe La Torre - EUPHA (EPI) Reductions in housing benefit increases depression risk in low-income UK households MAIN CONFERENCE

Saturday 4 November Aaron Reeves - United Kingdom

86 TIME, LOCATION TRACK POSTER WALKS AND ORGANISER Sat 4th Poster walk 1 10.R. Poster walk: Chronic disease and disability 11:40-13:10 Chairperson(s): Iveta Nagyova - EUPHA (CHR)

T foyer 10.R.1 Community screening in disadvantaged areas: Addressing a gap in the detection of type 2 diabetes Tanya Lundin - Sweden 10.R.2 The effect of sleep apnea on type 2 diabetes and arterial hypertension, Madalina Dumitru - Romania 10.R.3 Loss of productivity due to diabetes in Finland between 2002 - 2011, Olli Kurkela - Finland 10.R.4 Development and validation of DM-specific health literacy tool for Mandarin-speaking population Chiung-Hsuan Chiu - Taiwan 10.R.5 Fatigue of 2-17 years old children with asthma in Lithuania, Vaida Taminskiene - Lithuania 10.R.6 Adherence to guideline-recommended drug therapy in patients with chronic heart failure Gerald Gredinger - Austria 10.R.7 Psychosocial Factors as Predictors of Adjustment to Life in Chronic Portuguese Patients Estela Vilhena - Portugal 10.R.8 Using burden of disease data to identify public health practice priorities, Jana Kollarova - Slovakia 10.R.9 Examining the number and quality of physical activity-related if-then plans for weight loss success, Farah Islam - Canada 10.R.10 Costs and disability among multiple sclerosis patients: A Swedish register-based study Hanna Gyllensten - Sweden 10.R.11 Health care expenditures and out-of-pocket payments for people with disability, Sylvain Pichetti - France 10.R.12 Epidemiology of traumatic brain injuries in Central European countries in 2012 Dominika Plancikova - Slovakia 10.R.13 A three years population-based study of hospitalized patients with major trauma in Northern Italy Paola Rossello - Italy Sat 4th Poster walk 2 10.S. Poster walk: Nutrition in childhood 11:40-13:10 Chairperson(s): Auke Wiegersma - The Netherlands

T foyer 10.S.1 Working together in times of change: young people and local services in the North West of England, Sara Southall - United Kingdom 10.S.2 Prevalence of overweight and obesity among 10-11-year old children in Southern Kazakhstan Omarova Balnur - Kazakhstan 10.S.3 Structured health coaching to prevent childhood obesity in socio-economically vulnerable areas

Joachim Werr - Sweden Saturday 4 November 10.S.4 Trends in overweight/obesity and physical activity in Czech children in relation to family affluence MAIN CONFERENCE Erik Sigmund - Czech Republic 10.S.5 Obesity prevention – is school an appropriate place? – a systematic review, Ulla Walter - Germany 10.S.6 Children’s Eating Behavior: A validity and reliability study in Turkey, Hilal Ozcebe - Turkey 10.S.7 Father-reported frequency of family meals and dietary patterns among preschoolers Henna Vepsäläinen - Finland 10.S.8 Mediterranean diet, nutrient intakes and pregnancy: results from a Sicilian mother-child cohort Andrea Maugeri - Italy 10.S.9 Validity of a food picture book in assessing children’s portion sizes, Kaija Nissinen - Finland 10.S.10 Use of vitamin D supplements among Finnish preschool children, Essi Skaffari - Finland 10.S.11 Childhood obesity increases risk of premature death in young adulthood – A prospective cohort study, Louise Lindberg - Sweden 10.S.12 Sugar-sweetened beverage and artificially sweetened beverage consumption from childhood to adulthood, Kathrine Bolt-Evensen - Norway

87 TIME, LOCATION TRACK POSTER WALKS AND ORGANISER 10.S.13 Happy teachers and happy school children: going hand in hand, Guido Van Hal - Belgium 10.S.14 Parental willingness to pay for prevention of childhood overweight: correlations with parental health, Romy Lauer - Germany 10.S.15 Games can help empower children from low-income families to take healthy choices in daily life Karolina Mackiewicz - Finland

TIME, LOCATION AND ORGANISER JOIN THE NETWORKS

Sat 4th – 13.10-14.10 – Room K11 - EUPHA (ETH) Ethics in public health: Join the network

TIME, LOCATION TRACK PLENARY SESSION AND ORGANISER Sat 4th PL5 - Preparing communities for public health emergencies 14:10-15:10 Moderators: Karl Ekdahl - ECDC and Aura Timen - EUPHA (IDC)

K1, K2 Speakers/panellists: Margareta Wahlström, former Special Representative of the U.N. Secretary-General for Disaster Risk Reduction ECDC, EUPHA Dominique Monnet, ECDC (ICD) Jaap van Dissel, The Netherlands Qudsia Huda, WHO Sat 4th Closing Ceremony 15:10-16:00 Moderator: Birger Forsberg, Chair of the 10th European Public Health Conference

K1, K2 From athletics to health promotion – founded on evidence, successful through passion Carolina Klüft, Generation Pep, Sweden

Awards ceremony - Best Poster Prize, Best Abstract Prize, Ferenc Bojan Award

Welcome to Ljubljana 2018 - Ivan Erzen, Chair of the 11th European Public Health Conference MAIN CONFERENCE Saturday 4 November

88 POSTER DISPLAYS ARE SHOWN ON TV SCREENS WITHOUT PRESENTATION AND MODERATION ALL POSTERS ARE DISPLAYED AT ALL TIMES DURING THE CONFERENCE AT THE GALLERY DA Poster display: Posters on community and environment

DA .1 Climate changes and Workplace Heath Exposure: knowledge and perceptions of Safety Representatives, Matteo Ricco - Italy DA .2 An ecosystemic approach for urban problems, environment and quality of life, André Francisco Pilon - Brazil DA .3 Supersaturation and cold air as a common trigger for respiratory infections and diseases, Aleksandr Ishmatov - Russia DA .4 Mutagenic and genotoxic effect of PM0 .5 in different Italian towns: the MAPEC_LIFE study, Marco Verani - Italy DA .5 Challenges for healthcare systems due to heat waves (Case study Novi Sad, Serbia), Marija Jevtic - EUPHA (ENV) DA .6 Reproductive Hazards and Metal Smelting, Aelita Sargsyan - Armenia DA .7 The Lac-Mégantic Photovoice Initiative, Tracey O'Sullivan - Canada DA .8 Social Capital in a Value Chain Intervention, Spencer Moore - United States DA .9 The water consumption behaviors of the students of Inonu University and influencing factors, Turkey, Erkan Pehlivan - Turkey DA .10 Rehabilitation in a New Context - A PhD Research Protocol, Louise Sofia Madsen - Denmark DA .11 Regional mortality differences in big Russian cities, Alla Ivanova - Russia DA .12 Air contamination in operating rooms: is it better to follow the guidelines or the experience? Niccolò Vonci - Italy DA .13 Implementing international multidisciplinary collaboration for built environment safety and usability, Jake Pauls - Canada DA .14 Spatial inequalities in life expectancy related to educational level in the urban context of Rome, Livia Maria Salvatori - Italy DA .15 Health in all policies and urban green spaces: the baseline study of the GREENH-City project, Marion Porcherie - France DA .16 Collaboration as a core element for dissemination: examples from the EURO-HEALTHY project, Joana Morrison - United Kingdom DA .17 A review package for health impact assessment reports on development projects - progress of use, Mette Winge Jakobsen - Denmark DA .18 Enhancing Media Communication for Better Urban Environmental Health Practice in Africa, Wilson Okaka - Uganda DA .19 Active mobility and physical activity – results from the pan-European PASTA project, Ulf Eriksson - Sweden DA .20 Roles, responsibilities, and challenges in United States housing policy governance, Charley Willison - United States

DD Poster display: Posters on healthy living

DD .1 Health and quality of life among the oldest-old in Southern European countries: what matters? Carla Blázquez-Fernández - Spain DD .2 Epidemiology of foot deformities in southern italy: focus on Pes planus and Pes cavus, Gianmarco Troiano - Italy DD .3 Oral health and rehabilitation in the institutionalized elderly: a public health issue in Portugal, Nélio Veiga - Portugal DD .4 The association between physical activity and obesity differs by physical mobility among elderly, Anu Molarius - Sweden DD .5 Equity impact of interventions promoting physical activity – points to consider, Gesa Lehne - Germany DD .6 Forgiveness: A positive psychological resource for late life well-being, Jessie Dezutter - Belgium DD .7 The impact of intergenerational programs on children and elder adults, Gianluca Voglino - Italy DD .8 Interprofessional collaboration in fall prevention, Isabel Baumann - Switzerland

DD .9 Social care – a blind spot in Norwegian home care, Walter Schönfelder - Norway POSTER DISPLAYS DD .10 Epidemiology of football injuries: emergency medical care patterns in three Swedish counties, Robert Ekman - Sweden DD .11 Environmental or infectious events: A threat for vulnerable population, Yasmine Baghdadi - France DD .12 Impact of a pro-active monitoring program on older adults’ mortality during the heat waves, Giuseppe Liotta - Italy DD .13 What is the best economic measure for population health? A cross-national European analysis, Srinivasa Katikireddi - United Kingdom DD .14 Using ICD-9-CM to find adverse events relation with diagnosis admissions in hospitals, Paulo Sousa - Portugal DD .15 Changes in balance postural across the lifespan in women from Bogotá - Colombia, Adriana Gutiérrez Galvis - Colombia DD .16 Regional differences in physical capacity and cognition among older Chinese: What factors to blame? Yaoyue Hu - Germany DD .17 Alcohol Consumption and Self-Rated Health among Older People in mid-Sweden, Jim Lindström - Sweden DD .18 Closing the gap: a multi-stakeholder initiative of health promotion in 20 suburban Roman districts, Paolo Parente - Italy DD .19 Effectiveness of peer-led health promotion interventions addressed to the elderly: systematic review, Marcin Grysztar - Poland DD .20 Risk factors impeding help-seeking behaviors among victims of domestic violence, Yelena Sardaryan - Armenia DD .21 The relationships between handgrip strenght and bone mineral density in older women, Andrejus Cernovas - Lithuania DD .22 Regional pilots for improving care coordination for frail elderly in France, Zeynep Or - France

89 POSTER DISPLAYS ARE SHOWN ON TV SCREENS WITHOUT PRESENTATION AND MODERATION ALL POSTERS ARE DISPLAYED AT ALL TIMES DURING THE CONFERENCE AT THE GALLERY DD .23 National action plan to prevent accidental injuries among people aged under 25 in Finland 2009−2016, Anne Lounamaa - EUPHA (INJ) DD .24 Housing tenure predicts happiness of older people: the evidence from an 18-year followed-up study, Yu-Hung Chang - Taiwan DD .25 What kills middle-aged Swedes? Non-communicable risk factors and death in a prospective cohort study, Ailiana Santosa - Sweden DD .26 Sitting time and obesity among older adults in low- and middle-income countries, Nawi Ng - Sweden DD .27 Early health economic models of new ambient assisted living (AAL) devices for falls prevention, Stefania Manetti - Italy DE Poster display: Posters on health promotion

DE .1 Drugs abuse in general population, Gianmarco Troiano - Italy DE .2 How much cocaine is there on our money? Gianmarco Troiano - Italy DE .3 Smoking habits and anti-CCP antibodies in patients with Rheumatoid Arthritis, Gabriela Chirea - Romania DE .4 Current and past smokers’ beliefs, attitudes and experiences related to quitting smoking, Varduhi Hayrumyan - Armenia DE .5 Exposure to tobacco smoke of the Portugal resident population aged 15 and over in 2014, Joao Machado - Portugal DE .6 New treatment episodes of substance use problems in Belgian general practice (2016), Nicole Boffin - Belgium DE .7 Internet addiction prevalence in last-year medical students and related factors, Meltem Akdemir - Turkey DE .8 Barriers of access to smoking cessation support among low-SES smokers: a conceptual model, Els Van Wijk - The Netherlands DE .9 Assessment of some health risk factors related with the lifestyle of student nurses, Gergana Petrova - Bulgaria DE .10 Take another shot as penalty: a funny and competitive new adventure in extreme alcoholic games, Stefania Barbieri - Italy DE .11 What are the factors for electronic cigarette use in French young adults? Fabienne Khoury - France DE .12 Are polymorphisms in VMAT1 and CHRNAB3 associated with nicotine dependence in physicians in Estonia? Kersti Pärna - Estonia DE .13 Perceptions of plain tobacco packaging: DePICT, a French national survey, Fabienne Khoury - France DE .14 Smoking among Teenage Children Attending School: A Systematic Review of Observational Studies, Shafquat Rozi - Pakistan DE .15 Planning of national prospective study on tobacco behavior transition among adolescents in Korea, Jinju Park - Korea, South DE .16 Effective Public Policy Awareness Communication Campaign to Prevent Drug and Alcohol Abuse in Uganda, Wilson Okaka - Uganda DE .17 Migration intentions and health risk behaviour among university students in Slovakia, Ondrej Kalina - Slovakia DE .18 Excessive alcohol consumption among medical students studying in their home country or abroa, András Terebessy - Hungary DE .19 Healthcare aimed quantitative study of Bucharest drug users, David Mangaloiu - Romania DE .20 Alcohol consumption among medical students in the Czech Republic: Survey at the Palacky University, Alena Petráková - Czech Republic DF Poster display: Posters on health services

DF .1 Critical reflection: an educational way for public health nurses to emphasize core learning outcomes, Stina Dolvik - Norway DF .2 Contributions of a PAR approach to building health management capacity at district level, Moses Tetui - Sweden DF .3 Assessing Engagement and Knowledge Regarding Advance Care Directives, Jacob Bradshaw - United States DF .4 Adverse drug reactions – problems with spontaneous reporting systems, Festina Balidemaj - Kosovo DF .5 Patient mobility as a quality index of a bone marrow transplant center, Gianmarco Troiano - Italy DF .6 Perceptions of Health Directorates Managers on Eye Health Promotion in South Africa, Lawrence Sithole - South Africa DF .7 Peripartal HRQoL, depressive symptoms and socioeconomic status (SES) on a communal level, Niina Sahrakorpi - Finland DF .8 Resources availability for sustainable health system in Bulgaria, Mariela Kamburova - Bulgaria DF .9 All in One Long Term Care Service in Rural Communities, Chung-Chieh Tu - Taiwan DF .10 Readiness and willingness of Bulgarian physicians and nurses to face the challenges of eHealth, Virginia Atanasova - Bulgaria DF .11 The therapeutic prescription among dental medicine students: a comparative stud, Nélio Veiga - Portugal DF .12 Impact of issuing longer vs shorter duration prescriptions in patients with stable chronic conditions, Celine Miani - Germany DF .13 Determinants of hospitalization among the elderly people in Vojvodina, Sonja Cankovic - Serbia DF .14 The hospital sector reform in Bulgaria, Nikolai Hristov - Bulgaria POSTER DISPLAYS DF .15 Gender medicine in practice: Argenta gender oriented Hospital Issue/problem, Fulvia Signani - Italy DF .16 Cost-effectiveness of controlling diabetes in primary care, Zoltan Voko - Hungary DF .17 A complex case patients with Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis using administrative record linkage, Francesca Bravi - Italy

90 POSTER DISPLAYS ARE SHOWN ON TV SCREENS WITHOUT PRESENTATION AND MODERATION ALL POSTERS ARE DISPLAYED AT ALL TIMES DURING THE CONFERENCE AT THE GALLERY DF .18 Determinants of Health Seeking Behavior in Pakistan: A Complex Health Survey Design, Shafquat Rozi - Pakistan DF .19 The Intervention Wheel - a tool for nursing students to understand Public Health in a Swedish context, Kristina Carlén - Sweden DF .20 Migration intentions and specialty preferences among Hungarian medical students, Ferenc Horváth - Hungary DF .21 Public health interventions targeting excluded groups: trust as a key factor for success, Natalie Forster - United Kingdom DF .22 integrated Home Care Programs for frail older people: evidence from a systematic review, Anna Acampora - Italy DF .23 Purposive methodology to narrow the health gap – a local hospital’s action plan for prevention, Maria Magnusson - Sweden DF .24 Expert consultation for a roadmap to the implementation of image-based mHealth diagnostic support, Lucie Laflamme- Sweden DF .25 Keys to analyzing societal reforms – the case of social and health care reform in Finland, Sakari Karvonen - Finland DF .26 Exploring nursing profession in Armenia from nurses prospective: a qualitative study, Serine Sahakyan - Armenia DF .27 A small-area validation of deprivation using 2011 census data from Cyprus, Demetris Lamnisos - Cyprus DF .28 Breastfeeding Self-Efficacy in Portuguese Pregnant Women, Barbara Figueiredo - Portugal DF .29 Day-surgery laparoscopic cholecystectomy in Veneto region, Mario Saia - Italy DF .30 Cost of outpatient treatment of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) in Bulgaria (2015), Silviya Yankulovska - Bulgaria DF .31 Patients’ role in improving medication safety, Jurgita Vladickiene - Lithuania DF .32 The association between health literacy and ehealth literacy in young adult population in Poland, Mariusz Duplaga - Poland DF .33 A comparative analysis of prevention governance in four European countries, Alice Borghini - Italy DF .34 Is there an association between home-tobacco outlet proximity and smoking status in Denmark? Gabriele Berg-Beckhoff - Denmark DF .35 Activities of the local bioethical committee of the Republic of Kazakhstan, Zhanagul Bekbergenova - Kazakhstan DF .36 Is consumer choice in health care good for society from an efficiency perspective, Weon_young Lee - Korea, South DF .37 Core public health functions in New Zealand, Daniel Williams - New Zealand DF .38 The implementation of Sida’s performance-based financing model in Zambia: a case study, Birger Forsberg - Sweden DF .39 Primary healthcare reform in Slovenia – focus on changing population needs, Vesna-Kestrin Petric - Slovenia DF .40 Quality of intrapartum care in health facilities in Rwanda - a prospective cross-sectional study, Judith Mukamurigo - Sweden DF .41 An inter-sectoral approach to improve health status of migrant and seasonal farm workers in Turkey, Ilker Kayi - Turkey DF .42 The importance of using the designated duty officers when assessing a medical response organization, Peter Berggren - Sweden DF .43 Health related quality of life determinants for Rwandan women after delivery,, Regis Hitimana - Sweden DF .44 Deep learning for image-based diagnostic support: initial development of a system for acute burns, Constance Boissin - Sweden DF .45 Impact of culture on community resilience in natural disaster situations, Margit Raich - Austria DF .46 Clusters for as a new Approach for Risk Management in Cross-border Healthcare, Lidia Georgieva - Bulgaria DF .47 Budgets revealed: drilling down through Romania’s hospital expenditure, Stefan Strilciuc - Romania DF .48 Out-of-pocket expenditures in rural Tajikistan and their impact on patients with chronic diseases, Gulzira Karimova - Tajikistan DF .49 How to scale up an early intervention home visiting program, Stina Dolvik - Norway DF .50 Implementing an electronic WHO Safe Childbirth Checklist at a tertiary hospital in Bangladesh, Aminur Rahman - Bangladesh DF .51 Läkarmedverkan, a physician-led initiative for complex care management, is cost-effective, Jonathan Slutzman - United States POSTER DISPLAYS DF .52 Measuring the gaps: Challenges in identifying health inequalities within Europe, Eva Pilot - The Netherlands DF .53 Redesigned the public . A question of transformative resilience thinking, Evika Karamagioli - Greece DF .54 Facilitating local change in the English NHS: learning from a delivery partner model, Neil Riley - United Kingdom DF .55 Involvement of communities in health planning in rural Tajikistan, Gulzira Karimova - Tajikistan DF .56 e-Partograph, to improve use of partograph at two tertiary public hospitals in Bangladesh, Aminur Rahman - Bangladesh DF .57 Applied statistical process control on low birth weight in a Portuguese Primary Health Care Grouping, Sofia Rocha -Portugal DF .58 Identification of delivery models for predictive genetic testing: a systematic review, Brigid Unim - Italy DF .59 Patients and family rights in an inpatient tuberculosis facility in Armenia, Varduhi Hayrumyan - Armenia DF .60 Staff knowledge and practice of infection control in one rural and one urban hospital in Vietnam, La Thi Quynh Lien - Sweden DF .61 Application of multilevel approach for management of type 2 diabetes in region of Southern Denmark, Fadumo Noor - Denmark DF .62 Development of a research agenda for analysing long-term impacts of disasters, Margit Raich - Austria DF .63 Intention to use mHealth for burn injury diagnosis among health workers in a low-income country, Anders Klingberg - Sweden DF .64 Development of value-integrating and sustainable models of elderly care, Lotta Dellve - Sweden

91 POSTER DISPLAYS ARE SHOWN ON TV SCREENS WITHOUT PRESENTATION AND MODERATION ALL POSTERS ARE DISPLAYED AT ALL TIMES DURING THE CONFERENCE AT THE GALLERY DF .65 Analysis on health expenditure and correlation with perceived health status in 8 Countries, Daniele Ignazio La Milia - Italy DF .66 Watching of health related television programs of adults and examining the situation of their affect, Erkan Pehlivan - Turkey DF .67 Application of TSH reflex algorithm in an italian hospital: preliminary results, Gianmarco Troiano - Italy DF .68 Effectiveness of educational interventions to improve genomic competency in medical doctors, Dario Arzani - Italy DF .69 Health data of Special Olympics Athletes from WWG 2017, Barbara Goedl-Purrer - Austria DF .70 Direct and indirect costs of adverse drug events, Hanna Gyllensten - Sweden DH Poster display: Posters on the health workforce

DH .1 Implementing Augmentative and Alternative Communication in Critical Care Settings, Charlotte Handberg - Denmark DH .2 Improvising a scientific solution: local problem solving in the Portuguese Health Examination Study, Heidi Lyshol - Norway DH .3 Level of food additive knowledge and perceptions of food safety of university students, Ali Ozer - Turkey DH .4 Core competences in genetics for healthcare professionals: results of a review and a Delphi survey, Alessia Tognetto - Italy DH .5 Preventing barriers through Genetic Screening for Hemoglobinopathies patients in Saudi Arabia, Maha Alotaibi - Saudi Arabia DH .6 Enablers and barriers to community engagement in public health emergency preparedness, Judit Takacs - Sweden DH .7 The development and growth of multi-disciplinary public health in the UK - lessons for replication, David Allen - United Kingdom DH .8 An Analysis of the Trumpitis Pandemic on Public Health and the Public Health Workforce, Suzanne Selig - United States DH .9 Public health and disaster medicine education: defining a new medical curricula in Portugal, Anna Cristina Simões Pinto De Oliveira - Portugal DH .10 Global Citizenship training for health professionals in Wales, Mariana Dyakova - United Kingdom DH .11 Implementation of competence-based Georgian-Norwegian master program in public health, Nino Chikhladze - Georgia DH .12 Medical students’ attitude regarding the integration of Serbia into the European Union, Jovana Todorovic - Serbia DH .13 The utilization of Q methodology to explore the ranking of professionalism of plastic surgeons ., Chiung-Hsuan Chiu - Taiwan DH .14 Capacity strengthening in public health through involvement of students in real-world research, Raushan Alibekova - Kazakhstan DH .15 Health Communication An in-depth analysis of the area of expertise and research literature 2010-2016, Susanne Karregard - Sweden DH .16 One-year sustainability of Stewardship policy interventions in Denmark and The The Netherlands, Natasa Loncarevic - Denmark DH .17 Healthy Lifestyle of Nurses and Nursing Students in Italy, Walter De Caro - Italy DH .18 Environment for the immigrant medical staff and foreign medical students in Bulgaria, Lidia Georgieva - Bulgaria DH .19 Making men visible in health policy: Lessons learned from Ireland's National Men's Health Policy, Noel Richardson - Ireland DH .20 Innovative public health training programme for health professionals in Olomouc region and beyond, Alena Petráková - Czech Republic DI Poster display: Posters on infectious diseases

DI .1 International travelers' attitude towards recommended vaccinations and malaria chemoprophylaxis, Gianmarco Troiano - Italy DI .2 Trichinellosis in Italy: a systematic review, Gianmarco Troiano - Italy DI .3 Seroprevalence of anti-VZV IgG in childbearing age women in Pleven region (Bulgaria), Silviya Yankulovska - Bulgaria DI .4 Healthcare professionals’ behavior role in a healthcare-associated infections prevention program, Ancah Caesarina Novi Marchianti - Indonesia DI .5 Diagnosis of human botulism in Northern Italy during 2012-2016, Guido Finazzi - Italy DI .6 epidemiology of intestinal parasitic diseases in Nepalese children, Chiara Bertoncello - Italy DI .7 Talking about meningitis . How is the quality of online newspapers information? An Italian study, Loredana Covolo - Italy DI .8 Decrease in immunization coverage and threat for cross border measles epidemic in Bulgaria, Mariela Kamburova - Bulgaria DI .9 Improving preparedness to respond to epidemics and pandemics: the ASSET EU project, Donato Greco - Italy DI .10 Meningococcal disease and vaccination: knowledge, attitudes and practice in adolescents in Italy, Gabriella Di Giuseppe - Italy DI .11 The role of intrauterine infections in the development of cerebral palsy in children, Maira Balgayeva - Kazakhstan DI .12 Microbiological ascertainment in patients with pneumonia: is there room for improvement? Marianxhela Dajko - Italy DI .13 Are sepsis awareness and antimicrobial stewardship competing goals? A newsprint content analysis, Shona Hilton - United Kingdom POSTER DISPLAYS DI .14 Risk factors of conversion to drug resistant tuberculosis (TB) in Armenia . A Case-control study, Kristina Akopyan - Armenia DI .15 Dilemmas of healthcare workings when caring for carriers of multidrug resistant bacteria, Renske Eilers - The Netherlands DI .16 A wearable Ultraviolet C Light (UVC) device for the automatic disinfection of the stethoscope, Giuseppe Spataro - Italy

92 POSTER DISPLAYS ARE SHOWN ON TV SCREENS WITHOUT PRESENTATION AND MODERATION ALL POSTERS ARE DISPLAYED AT ALL TIMES DURING THE CONFERENCE AT THE GALLERY DI .17 SMARTPHONE: is it possible to bring down the risk of microbial cross contamination? Giuseppe Spataro - Italy DI .18 'To school of prevention: the vaccinations', project in the ASL Roma 4, Clara Fusillo - Italy DI .19 Vaccine hesitancy and Health Literacy: a means to prevent vaccine refusal? Guglielmo Bonaccorsi - Italy DI .20 Risk communication of infectious disease outbreaks: an online training for public health officials, Angela Osterheider - Germany DI .21 Measles outbreaks in Europe in 2017: lessons for Health Promotion theory and good Practice, Luís Saboga Nunes - EUPHA (HP) DI .22 Theoretical practical and ethical implications of future-based approaches to post-disaster disease, Charlotte Christiane Hammer - United Kingdom DI .23 Risk factors for communicable diseases in complex emergencies, a systematic review of the literature Charlotte Christiane Hammer - United Kingdom DI .24 Measle strategy elimination’ evaluation, Switzerland, 2015-2016, Valerie Henry - Switzerland DI .25 Public risk communication and the role of responsibility: an interdisciplinary approach, Angela Osterheider - Germany DI .26 Visiting friends and relatives (VFR) travellers and vaccination: concerns and compliance, Annick Opinel - France DI .27 Vaccine hesitancy: a population-level survey in Northern Italy, Anna Odone - Italy DI .28 Italian Immunization Plan: assessment of vaccine prevention objectives for an effective stewardship, Paolo Parente - Italy DI .29 Participatory surveillance on influenza as a tool for health promotion, Ricardo Filipe Mexia - Portugal DI .30 Improving travellers’ referral to travel medicine consultation, in primary care in Portugal, 2017, Liliana Gomes - Portugal DK Poster display: Posters on chronic diseases DK .1 The "Angelina Jolie effect", Gianmarco Troiano - Italy DK .2 Cost-effectiveness and budget impact of new therapies for metastatic melanoma, Paolo Campanella - Italy DK .3 Insulin resistance as a potential risk factor for breast cancer, Dagmar Horakova - Czech Republic DK .4 Integrated screening methodologies for patients harboring colo rectal cancer into the TAIEX context, Fabiana Rubba - Italy DK .5 Could inequalities of prostate cancer occurrence be explained by environmental risk factors? Małgorzata C´wiela˛g-Drabek - Poland DK .6 How do primary care professionals influence the success of a screening program?A qualitative study, Saloa Unanue - Spain DK .7 Growth rate of breast and lung cancer incidence in the population of women in Silesia (Poland), Ilona Hajok - Poland DK .8 Coverage of national breast cancer screening program and women's perception in a region in Turkey, Nuket Paksoy Erbaydar - Turkey DK .9 Knowledge, Attitudes and Practice about Cervical Cancer Screening among Women Living in Edirne, Burcu Tokuc - Turkey DK .10 Community health agents: the prevention of lip cancer in rural areas, Lucimare Ferraz - Brazil DK .11 Vitamin K antagonists: impact on hospitalizations and accesses to emergency room, Gianmarco Troiano - Italy DK .12 Need for hyperlipidaemia Management Policy Reform in China: Learning from the Global Experience, Ruizhi Shi - China DK .13 Use of 10 years CVD risk assessment as a primary prevention tool for cardiovascular disease, Ruizhi Shi - China DK .14 Preventive examinations of elderly persons in in Zagreb, Croatia, Maja Maric-Bajs - Croatia DK .15 Congenital heart defects in the East of Spain, Clara Cavero Carbonell - Spain DK .16 Physical activity and cardiovascular risk factors in elderly in rural Cundinamarca, Colombia, Rosmary Martinez-Rueda - Colombia DK .17 Cardiometabolic risk factors prevalence among cardiovascular patients in Serbia, Slad¯ana Muratovic´ - Serbia POSTER DISPLAYS DK .18 Cardiopulmonary ressuscitation training: Opinions and experiences of last year medical students, Nesrin Cilingiroglu - Turkey DK .19 The reducing cardiovascular mortality in Russia in context of death statistics, Tamara Sabgayda - Russia DK .20 Generalisability of effect size estimates for SNPs related to HDL-C obtained on European populations, Peter Piko - Hungary DK .21 Do Gender and Education Status of Patients Impact on Quality of Their Life After Myocard Infarction, Pinar Soylar - Turkey DK .22 Lifestyle and ischemic heart disease: risk evaluation using cardiac magnetic resonance imaging, Donatas Austys - Lithuania DK .23 Assessment of mortality from coronary heart disease in Astana, the Republic of Kazakhstan, Zhanagul Bekbergenova - Kazakhstan DK .24 Effectiveness of the screening program of cardiovascular diseases in the Republic of Kazakhstan, Zhanagul Bekbergenova - Kazakhstan DK .25 Team-Based Care for Improving Hypertension management: the TBC-HTA randomized controlled study, Valérie Santschi - Switzerland DK .26 Prevalence and predictors of heart patients’ perceived psychosocial support by the health care system, Line Zinckernagel - Denmark DK .27 Cardiovascular disease and pregnancy, David Mangaloiu - Romania DK .28 Impaired fasting glucose prevalence and related factors in aged 9-16 years children, Nazli Atak - Turkey DK .29 Tertiary prevention for chronic patellar tendinopathies: a pre-post study through PRP infiltrations, Gianmarco Troiano - Italy DK .30 Reimbursement policy for hypertension drugs and patients’ access to treatment in Bulgaria (2016), Silviya Yankulovska - Bulgaria

93 POSTER DISPLAYS ARE SHOWN ON TV SCREENS WITHOUT PRESENTATION AND MODERATION ALL POSTERS ARE DISPLAYED AT ALL TIMES DURING THE CONFERENCE AT THE GALLERY DK .31 The Osteogenesis imperfecta in the Valencia Region, Spain, Clara Cavero Carbonell - Spain DK .32 Global Psoriasis Coalition: Addressing the needs of psoriasis patients in the NCD agenda, Vasilka Lalevska - Sweden DK .33 Premature mortality in Russia is approaching European levels, Elena Zemlyanova - Russia DK .34 Global health fact: nasal symptom impair quality of life among persistent allergic rhinitis patients, Gaetano Marrone - Sweden DK .35 Validation of the Persian Version of the Spiritual Needs Questionnaire, Zahra Taheri-Kharameh - Iran DK .36 Qualitative description of experiences of temporomandibular disorder symptoms in Yerevan, Armenia, Shogher Muradyan - Armenia DK .37 dementia .active .life – a health initiative for physical activity in people with dementia, Eva Mir - Austria DK .38 Proactive management of chronicity: the new approach of Integrated and Structured Clinical Networks, Agnese Verzuri - Italy DK .39 Contribution of specific diseases to disability . Results from GEDA-EHIS 2014, Elena Von Der Lippe - Germany DK .40 Public health policy making in Stockholm County, Maja Wessel - Sweden DK .41 Assessment of education program in diabetes school in a state hospital, Turkey, Pinar Soylar - Turkey DK .42 Successful integration of advice on healthy lifestyle in pharmacological guidelines in Stockholm, Helena Holmgren - Sweden DK .43 Social inequality in functional limitations and workability for people with musculoskeletal pain, Natasja Koitzsch Jensen - Denmark DK .44 Nursing assessment procedure for diabetic peripheral neuropathy in Primary Care, Sara Darias-Curvo - Spain DK .45 Systematic review about health,profession,quality of life affected by dermatological disorders, Silvia Florescu - Romania DK .46 Choices of multistakeholders for economic models towards precision medicines, Christine Huttin - United States DK .47 Risk perceptions among persons living with prediabetes in Stockholm, Linda Timm - Sweden DK .48 The evaluation of the effect of sleep apnea on blood sugar levels on patients with type 2 diabetes, Madalina Dumitru - Romania DK .49 Predictors of return to work in spinal cord injury - a systematic review, Matei Teodorescu - Romania DK .50 Chronic non communicable diseases in Congolese military: cross-sectional study 2015, Jean Paul Ilunga Mulaja - Congo, Democratic Republic of the DL Poster display: Posters on migrant and ethnic minority health DL .1 A political, sociological and medical analysis of "Operation Sophia", Gianmarco Troiano - Italy DL .2 Experiences of the Health Examination for Asylum Seekers - Focus Groups with Refugees in Sweden, Josefin Wångdahl -Sweden DL .3 Changing negative narrative of Health Professionals, Zoran Bikovski - Macedonia DL .4 How do immigrant women access the public healthcare services in the Basque Country (Spain)? Iratxe Perez-Urdiales - Spain DL .5 Mentorship program for Roma medical students as a new educational approach in Bulgaria, Mariela Kamburova - Bulgaria DL .6 Disparities in satisfaction with tertiary preventive care between Germans and non-Germans in Germany, Patrick Brzoska - Germany DL .7 The use of hospital services among migrants in Finland, Hannamaria Kuusio - Finland DL .8 Lack of legal status and health rights of Palestinian women spouses of Palestinian Israeli citizens, Nihaya Daoud - Israel DL .9 Migration background and health of children and adolescents in Austria, Wolfgang Freidl - Austria DL .10 Scottish Health and Ethnicity Linkage Study: Communicating the findings with the public and professionals, Raj Bhopal - United Kingdom DL .11 Accessibility of women of Roma origin to the public health system for 2016, Galya Traykova - Bulgaria DL .12 Evidenced barriers and solutions for migrants in accessing health care services:a systematic review, Valentina Chiesa - Italy DL .13 Relevance of resources on the health behavior of female adolescents with Turkish migrant background, Zeynep Islertas - Germany DL .14 Promotion of healthy lifestyle in Roma ethnic community in Slovenia, Tatjana Krajnc Nikolic´ - Slovenia DL .15 Health literacy, the role of beliefs and barriers in Afghanistan . A quantitative study, Stefanie Harsch - Germany DL .16 Important gaps in HIV knowledge, attitudes and practices (KAP) among young asylum seekers, Paula Tiittala - Finland DL .17 Immigrant parents’ perspective on public health services for their children in Taiwan, Hung-Chieh (jessica) Chang - Taiwan DL .18 Networks as a tool for advancing the field of migration and health and equity in health care, Ragnhild Storstein Spilker - Norway DL .19 Hypertension and social determinants in a cohort of migrants acceding an outpatient clinic in Rome, Valentina Pettinicchio - Italy DL .20 Monitoring care of uninsured migrants in Germany . An implementation research study, Stefan Noest - Germany DM Poster display: Posters on mental health issues POSTER DISPLAYS DM .1 Frequency of depression in last-year medical students and affecting factors, Meltem Akdemir - Turkey DM .2 Social network resources and self-rated health in a deprived Danish neighborhood, Pernille Tanggaard - Denmark DM .3 Adolescent mental health policies in Sweden and China: a comparative study, Cheng Guo - Sweden

94 POSTER DISPLAYS ARE SHOWN ON TV SCREENS WITHOUT PRESENTATION AND MODERATION ALL POSTERS ARE DISPLAYED AT ALL TIMES DURING THE CONFERENCE AT THE GALLERY DM .4 Anxiety, depression and resilience in elders with chronic diseases, Zahra Taheri-Kharameh - Iran DM .5 The Warwick-Edinburgh Mental Wellbeing Scale: role and impact on public health policy and practice, Neha Shah - United Kingdom DM .6 Factors influencing binge watching in the population of young people, Željka Stamenkovic´ - Serbia DM .7 Trends in Inpatient Psychiatric Diagnoses in Sweden 1997-2011, Andreas Lundin - Sweden DM .8 Lying in dementia care . Is it ethically acceptable? Francesco Attena - Italy DM .9 Experiences of male workers whose families evacuated voluntarily after the Fukushima nuclear disaster, Kyoko Yoshioka-Maeda - Japan DM .10 Sickness absence and return-to-work determinants among employees with a common mental disorder, Alba Fishta - Germany DM .11 Evaluation of mental disorders and life orientation in adults, Ece Elif Öcal - Turkey DM .12 The relation of health related quality of life and optimism subdimension of life orientation test, Ece Elif Öcal - Turkey DM .13 Effects of bibliotherapy on treating depression: a systematic review, Maria Rosaria Gualano - Italy DM .14 Changes in psychosocial working conditions and changes in mental health status among women, Silke Tophoven - Germany DM .15 The effect of the drug use prevention program Unplugged on alcohol use in the Slovak Republic, Olga Orosova - Slovakia DM .16 Managing employees’ depression from workplace actors' perspectives – an integrative review, Cecilie Nørby Thisted - Denmark DM .17 Anger, Anger Expression Style And Related Factors In A Group Of Associate Degree Students, Gamze Varol Saraçogˇlu - Turkey DM .18 Risky workplace environment assessment of intern doctors at school and their exposure to mobbing, Erkan Pehlivan - Turkey DM .19 Cognitive impairment and healthcare needs: findings from a population based study in Turkey, Ozge Karadag Caman - Turkey DM .20 Young caregivers differ from older caregivers: a census-based record linkage study, Foteini Tseliou - United Kingdom DM .21 Suicide and engaging men in Ireland - middle-aged men a problem or the symptom of a problem? Shane O'donnell - Ireland DM .22 Pathways to psychiatric outpatient care and patient satisfaction with services in Stockholm, Sweden, Andreas Lundin - Sweden DM .23 Mental health impact among first responders following the November 2015 Paris terror attacks, Philippe Pirard - France DM .24 Systematic review of inequalities in positive mental health, Fredrik Söderqvist - Sweden DM .25 Depressive symptoms and associated behaviors among students: A cross sectional study in Normandy, Joel Ladner - France DM .26 The associations between mental health and well-being in women aged 60–74 years, Andrejus Cernovas - Lithuania DM .27 Gender related difference in sleep quality and tiredness in Austrian medical students, Christian Vajda - Austria DM .28 The benefical effects of choral singing, Kari Bjerke Batt-Rawden - Norway DM .29 A Danish register-based cohorte study on survey data on respondents with symptoms of depression ., Aake Packness - Denmark DM .30 The influence of the manner and intensity of use of mobile phones in some aspects of mental health, Aleksandar Višnjic´ - Serbia DM .31 How to control agitation in mental illness: the introduction of Loxapine inhalation powder, Flavia Kheiraoui - Italy DM .32 Community care in mental health patients - a systematic review, Silvia Florescu - Romania DN Poster display: Posters on child and adolescent public health

DN .1 Screening and care for non-medical risk factors in Preventive Child Healthcare, Minke Van Minde - The Netherlands DN .2 Dietary habits of tuscan children: results from "OKkio alla salute" 2014, Gianmarco Troiano - Italy

DN .3 How wage setting institutions redistribute incomes and improve health, Aaron Reeves - United Kingdom POSTER DISPLAYS DN .4 Mobile phone use and brain tumors in young people: Austrian experience within the MOBI-KIDS study, Hans-Peter Hutter - Austria DN .5 Implementation of Child Primary Health Care Interventions: Towards a Heuristic Governance Framework, Peter Schröder-Bäck - EUPHA (ETH) DN .6 Increasing Aerobic Fitness Leads to Higher Academic Performance in Adolescents, Akira Kyan - Japan DN .7 Nutritive value of free school meals in Nis, Serbia, Mario Ramic - Serbia DN .8 Why parents decide for a pharmacological treatment for their child’s ADHD, Julia Dratva - Switzerland DN .9 Nurses perception of the barriers for infant iron supplementation in the israeli negev bedouin, Ziva Stahl - Israel DN .10 Reducing School failures - a comprehensive action plan for health and regional development, Elisabeth Bengtsson - Sweden DN .11 Quality of life and use of health services in young adults not in employment, education or training, Leena Forma - Finland DN .12 Clustering of energy balance-related behaviours, sleep, and overweight among Finnish adolescents, Eva Roos - Finland DN .13 Confidentiality in adolescent reproductive healthcare: attitudes and practices of Serbian physicians, Vida Jeremic Stojkovic - Serbia DN .14 Effect of playing golf on children’s resilience, Tuch - Germany DN .15 Are risk factors for preterm and early term birth the same? A population-based study in France, Marie Delnord - France DN .16 Assessing the Conformance of Foods in School Canteens in Terms of Health in a City of Turkey, Ali Ozer - Turkey

95 POSTER DISPLAYS ARE SHOWN ON TV SCREENS WITHOUT PRESENTATION AND MODERATION ALL POSTERS ARE DISPLAYED AT ALL TIMES DURING THE CONFERENCE AT THE GALLERY DN .17 Psychosocial interventions for burn recovery in children and adolescents: a systematic review, Lisa Blom - Sweden DN .18 Societal influences on the child health policy .Agents of the child - children’s voice representation, Kinga Zdunek - Poland DN .19 Intervention study using population approach on physical education to physical activity in Japan, Minoru Kobayashi - Japan DN .20 Intervention to increase capabilities for physical activity in childcare centers: First results ., Holger Hassel - Germany DN .21 Criteria for evaluating transferability of child health interventions: A systematic review, Tamara Schloemer - The Netherlands DN .22 Testing of TSH during pregnancy to prevent preterm births: a budget-impact analysis for Austria, Stefan Fischer - Austria DN .23 Assessment-appraisal-decision: a new screening programme for pregnant women and children in Austria, Inanna Reinsperger - Austria DN .24 Over-the-counter drugs used by adolescents in Germany: How much do adolescents spend and what for? Peter Schröder-Bäck - EUPHA (ETH) DN .25 Drought and child mortality in Ethiopia . Can small-scale operational surveys tell us more? Tefera Darge Delbiso - Belgium DN .26 Content of Maternal Health Literacy in the First Year of Motherhood, Katerina Ivanova - Czech Republic DN .27 Perceived social and workplace support among breastfeeding mothers in Cyprus, Mary Economou - Cyprus DN .28 Exposure to mercury and weight-growth characteristics of the newborns in Republic of Karelia, Russia, Tatiana Boyarskaya - Russia DN .29 Analysis of risk factors in the development of cerebral palsy in children, Maira Balgayeva - Kazakhstan DN .30 Child health and wellbeing - nationwide, regular and multi-methodological data collection in Finland, Reija Klemetti - Finland DN .31 The attitude of children living in rural communities to a national assisted meal program in Romania, Ileana Prejbeanu - Romania DN .32 Growing Burden of Tobacco in a Successfully Controlled Country: Turkey, Burcu Kucuk Bicer - Turkey DN .33 A qualitative approach to commercial sexual exploitation of children (csec) in travel and tourism, Burcu Kucuk Bicer - Turkey DN .34 Boys and young men preventive reproductive health care in Croatia, Vesna Juresa - Croatia DN .35 The CHARMING study: Profiling role models for preadolescent girls, Kelly Morgan - United Kingdom DN .36 Characteristics of Mothers Whose Infants Died of Suffocation, Katerina Ivanova - Czech Republic DN .37 How well does blood pressure screening in schools inform public health? Julia Dratva - Switzerland DN .38 Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACE), health and wellbeing among children in the West Bank, Michal Molcho - Ireland DN .39 What constitute health promoting living environments from children’s perspectives? Malin Eriksson - Sweden DN .40 Use of health education campaigns to promote HPV vaccination in teenagers, Giagkos Lavranos - Cyprus DN .41 Long term efficacy of health promotion to improve STD awareness in adolescents, Giagkos Lavranos - Cyprus DN .42 Reducing child mortality from diarrhoeal diseases - How can we move forward? Birger Forsberg - Sweden DN .43 Investigation of Child Abuse and Neglect in Press Reports in in Turkey, Khaled Warasnhe - Turkey DN .44 The effect of ehealth literacy interventions for adolescents- Results of a systematic research, Inga Kloss - Germany DN .45 Attitudes, habits and awareness of parents in the appropriate use of antibiotics, Eva Nemcovska - Slovakia DN .46 Socioeconomic status based on household income - findings from Japan, Hajime Takeuchi - Sweden DN .47 Complex health intervention in primary schools: Findings from the pilot initiative ‘GrundGesund’, Birgit Babitsch - Germany DN .48 Exploring the Long-term Influence of the Family Nurse Partnership on the Lives of Young Mothers, Jessica Jackson - United Kingdom DN .49 Feasibility findings from the Charming study: a school-based role model programme, Kelly Morgan - United Kingdom DO Poster display: Posters on diet and physical activity

DO .1 Nutritional status evaluation of children under two years of age in 03 Provinces of Mozambique, Reka Maulide Cane - Mozambique DO .2 The Right to Food Security among Persons in the Second Half of their Lives, Aviad Tur-Sinai - Israel DO .3 Change in sugar sweetened beverage consumption and crelated biomarkers and nutrient in adolescents, Hsing-Yi Chang - Taiwan DO .4 Mining the Facebook goldmine: data analysis as a tool for improving health literacy for weight loss, Clara Affun-Adegbulu - Belgium DO .5 Childhood obesity in the nutrition transition of the southern European countries, Cecilia Guastadisegni - Italy DO .6 Facilitators and barriers in economic evaluations of nutrition interventions and policies, Alessandra Lafranconi - Italy DO .7 The Factors Determining Students’ Knowledge About Nutrition, Rimantas Stukas - Lithuania DO .8 Genetically Modified Organisms: Do Agricultural Engineers and Veterinarians Think Different? Nesrin Cilingiroglu - Turkey

POSTER DISPLAYS DO .9 Public perceptions and practices around red and processed in an English deprived borough, Alberto Mateo - United Kingdom DO .10 Experiences of women who dropped-out of support intervention after Roux-en-Y gastric bypass surgery, Sofie Possmark -Sweden DO .11 Knowledge, attitudes and practices about exclusive breastfeeding among women in Italy, Gabriella Di Giuseppe - Italy DO .12 A study protocol: evaluating the natural experiment of free school fruit in Norway (2007-14), Ingrid Marie Hovdenak - Norway

96 POSTER DISPLAYS ARE SHOWN ON TV SCREENS WITHOUT PRESENTATION AND MODERATION ALL POSTERS ARE DISPLAYED AT ALL TIMES DURING THE CONFERENCE AT THE GALLERY DO .13 A new website to support dietary assessment in health research: Nutritools .org, Nisreen Alwan - United Kingdom DO .14 Cross-curricular program and children`s knowledge about nutrition and physical activity in Serbia, Marija Jevtic - EUPHA (ENV) DO .15 The workplace: A priority setting for health promotion, Emilia Guberti - Italy DO .16 Taste and watch for an aware food consumption in the school, Emilia Guberti - Italy DO .17 Childhood Obesity in the urban part of Ankara, Turkey, Hilal Ozcebe - Turkey DO .18 Time trends of overweight in different age groups of Russian/Siberian population, Diana Denisova - Russia DO .19 Does the academic profile of the Romanian students influence their knowledge and attitude to food? Marianne Elena Dina - Romania DO .20 Qi-deficiency, phlegm dampness and poor appetite: a cross-sectional analysis, Yuchun Lin - Taiwan DO .21 Validation of the food frequency questionnaire in a general population cohort, Johanna Eyrun Torfadottir - Iceland DO .22 The Risk of Orthorexia in Turkish Adults and Relation with Body Mass Index, Pinar Soylar - Turkey DQ Poster display: Posters on work and health

DQ .1 Assessment of fatigue in nurses: A sample from a university hospital in Turkey, Aliye Mandiracioglu - Turkey DQ .2 The gap between Bulgarian legislation on health and safety at work and the real situation, Stela Georgieva - Bulgaria DQ .3 Social participation of people aged 55-64 years with and without a chronic disease, Micky Scharn - The Netherlands DQ .4 Economic discrimination and health in Andalusia, Javier Alvarez-Galvez - Spain DQ .5 Adverse outcomes of being on sick leave due to mental disorders: a prospective co-twin study, Lisa Mather - Sweden DQ .6 Positive encounters with healthcare among women sickness absent with breast cancer or other diagnoses, Mirkka Söderman - Sweden DQ .7 HIA in Italy: guideline for proponents and evaluators in environmental assessment (EA) procedures, Nunzia Linzalone - Italy DQ .8 Returning to work after breast cancer: a systematic review of reviews, Rosario Andrea Cocchiara - Italy DQ .9 Well-being and time use in expert work, Annina Ropponen - Finland DQ .10 Does napping affect quality of primary sleep among police officers working at night? Mads Nordentoft - Denmark DQ .11 Reliability/readability of silicosis-related Italian websites: implications for occupational health, Guglielmo Dini - Italy DQ .12 Influenza vaccination in healthcare workers, Paolo Durando - Italy DQ .13 Bicycle crashes and sickness absence - A nationwide Swedish cross-sectional study, Linnea Kjeldgård - Sweden DQ .14 Factors influencing the quality of sickness certificates in primary care in Sweden ., Magdalena Fresk - Sweden DQ .15 Association between multitasking and psychosomatic complaints in physicians – a study on work stress, Holger Pfaff - Germany DQ .16 Mapping an outcome measure to International Classification och Functioning, Disability and Health, Magdalena Fresk - Sweden DQ .17 Happiness and anguish made by the welfare state: work and health of caregivers, Ji-Eun Park - Korea, South DQ .18 Barriers and facilitators to return to work in mental disorders: multi-stakeholder perspective study, Margot Joosen - The Netherlands DQ .19 The gender gap in accrued pension points: an indicator of women’s accumulated disadvantages, Inger Haukenes - Norway DQ .20 Sickness absentees’ experiences of a work capacity evaluation, Emilie Friberg - Sweden DQ .21 Using sensor technology for workplace health promotion: A needs assessment among manual workers, Sander Spook - The Netherlands DQ .22 Administrative justice, denied sick-leave and encounters with the Social Insurance Agency in Sweden, Genevieve Grant - Australia

DQ .23 Health promotion behaviours in medical students and research assistants, Aydın, Turkey, Erdal Bes¸er - Turkey POSTER DISPLAYS DT Poster display: Posters on sexual health

DT .1 Spiders attacks: Black Widows and pregnant women, Gianmarco Troiano - Italy DT .2 A spatial regression analysis of intimate partner violence in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Ying-Chih Chuang - Taiwan DT .3 Development and Validation of a Antenatal Care-Specific Health Literacy Scale, Gulsum Ozturk Emiral - Turkey DT .4 Medication abortion provision in the primary health care setting of regional Victoria, Australia, Caroline De Moel-Mandel - Australia DT .5 Primary care nurses’ potential role in medication abortion provision in regional Victoria, Australia, Caroline De Moel-Mandel - Australia DT .6 Beyond gender stereotypes . Towards new diagnostic and treatment relationships, Francesca Bravi - Italy DT .7 Does youth clinics in northern Sweden offer person-centered care? Anna-Karin Waenerlund - Sweden DT .8 Health-social characteristics of the young Roma with risky behavior in Sliven, Bulgaria, Stefan Stefanov - Bulgaria DT .9 Women’s health in Germany – a concept for a new health report and preliminary results, Franziska Prütz - Germany DT .10 Sexual health knowledge and its promotion in adolescents: three years of interventions in Udine, Federico Romanese - Italy DT .11 Assessment of Health-Promoting Lifestyle Profile in Turkish Pregnant Women, Pinar Soylar - Turkey

97 SOCIAL PROGRAMME

WELCOME RECEPTION CONFERENCE DINNER AND DANCE Thursday 2 November, 19:00 - 21:00 Friday 3 November, 19:00 – 00:30

The Welcome Reception, kindly hosted by the City of Stockholm and the Stock- holm County Council, will be held in the Stockholm City Hall, one of the most famous silhouettes of Stockholm. This year the Welcome Reception will include a The dinner and dance will be held on at The Brewery (Munchen buffet meal. Attendance of Bryggeriet). The Conference Dinner and Dance can be booked at the Welcome Reception and €65. This year you can attend the Dance party without Conference Buffet is free of charge but Dinner. The party starts at 22:00 and ends after midnight. The dance registration is required as can be booked at €15 including welcome drink. If still available, places are limited. tickets can be purchased at the Registration Desk.

Stockholm City Hall

Munchen Bryggeriet

98 GREENING THE CONFERENCE

EPH Conference is committed to reducing the environmental Our conference suppliers do everything they can to limit the impact of the conference and finding ways to be more environmental impact of their products and services. environmentally responsible. EUPHA has set up a Green Club to further encourage greening All restaurants at Stockholmsmässan are licensed to use the the conference. Nordic Ecolabel. The catering company Mässrestauranger AB is certified with the environmental friendly certification called KRAV. Here are some initiatives we have taken to help minimize A KRAV-certification proves that a product is produced with an the impact of the conference on the environment. organic standard, with additional standards for animal care, n No beef. Lunches and Conference Dinner do no longer serve health, social responsibility and climate impact. beef meat. We encourage the choice for vegetarian lunch and dinner options. Stockholmsmässan is also committed to play their part in n Reduced printing. Printing of Posters, Announcements, Invitation positive community development. They are currently supporting Letters and marketing materials is reduced by switching to Ung Företagsamhet (Young Enterprise), Stockholm Winter Games E-Posters, digital marketing and email communication. and the Natur & Miljöpärmen educational scheme. We are very pleased that 70% of the delegates will no longer use a hard copy of the Programme Book. The Munchen Bryggeriet, location of the Conference Dinner and n Paperless communication. Abstract submission, registration dance, has been ecolabelled for many years. They strive to reduce and invoicing are fully web-based. The Conference Programme the negative environmental impact of their events by encouraging and Abstracts can be accessed online. practices that minimize the environmental impact. Their goal is to n Recycled materials. The Conference Bag is made of become one of Stockholm’s most sustainable event facility. recycled materials. The Programme Book is printed on FSC Mix paper. FSC Mix means at least 70% of the wood in the product The location of the Welcome Reception, Stockholm’s famous City is from FSC-certified material or recycled material; and 30% is hall is owned by the Municipality of Stockholm whose goal it is to controlled wood. from responsible sources. make Stockholm fossil free by 2040. This means that no heating or electricity and no transportation is done with fossil fuels such We encourage our delegates to reduce the effect of their air as oil or coal. travel on the climate. You can help by flying CO2 neutral with the CO2ZERO compensation service of your air travel company.

99 OUR PARTNERS AT STOCKHOLM

ORGANISERS & CO-ORGANISERS

INTERNATIONAL PARTNERS

NATIONAL PARTNERS

100 EXHIBITION

Organisers & Partners EUPHA - European Public Health Association EPH Conference Foundation

Health organisations European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control (ECDC) EuroHealthNet Public Health Agency of Sweden Karolinska Institutet, Sweden Stockholm County Council, Sweden Tobaksfakta, Sweden VSO International, United Kingdom

Schools of public health ASPHER Emergency Medicine International, USA

Publishers Emerald Insight, United Kingdom MDPI, Switzerland Oxford University Press, United Kingdom Springer Nature, United Kingdom The Lancet, United Kingdom Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group, United Kingdom Wisepress Ltd, United Kingdom

Industrial partner Colgate-Palmolive AB, USA

101 GENERAL INFORMATION Abstract Supplement On the front of your badge you will see Cloakroom Abstracts of all presentations in the coloured boxes. The colour of the boxes You will find the cloakroom in main hall on parallel programme are published in the corresponds with access on different days. your left after the main entrance. Use of the Supplement to the European Journal When a box is not coloured, no access is cloakroom is at own risk and responsibility of Public Health which can be accessed allowed that day. and free of charges. through your personal login at www.ephconference.eu. Delegates of the Conference Dinner and Dance 10th EPH Conference have free access The Conference Dinner and Dance is held to the full Journal for a period of three on Friday 3 November at the München months. Byggeriet. The Conference Dinner starts at 19:00. The Dance party start at 22:00. Accreditation W + Yellow = Wednesday - preconferences Please note that drinks other than offered The 10th EPH Conference has been granted T + Blue = Thursday - main conference during the dinner and dance can be with 23 European CME credits by the F + Green = Friday - main conference purchased at your own expense. European Accreditation Council for S + Orange = Saturday - main conference Continuing Medical Education (EACCME). Downloads Is the block not coloured, it means not booked Plenary presentations and photographs will ATM be available at the conference website For cash withdrawals, you will find Back of badge within a few days after the conference. an ATM in the Entrance Hall by the Stockholmsmässan Information desk. Emergency and First Aid The Stockholmsmässan Emergency and Catering First Aid number is +46 8 749 99 11. If Lunch is served on the ground floor for all the conference building has to be vacated days. It is not allowed to take your lunch for some reason, follow the orders of the with you into the conference rooms, except green 'book' icon is for the 'Programme book' right Security staff immediately and move to the for the attendees of the Lunch Symposiums. blue 'list' icon for the 'Participant list' gathering points outside the Main Entrance Take out boxes will be distributed. by the flag poles and in the Park outside the 'drink' for Welcome reception Parkside Restaurant. 'cutlery' for Dinner and Dance Conference badge 'people' for Dance Only Please wear your badge at all times during E-Poster walks and E-Poster displays. the conference, welcome reception and Is the block not coloured, it means not booked. Posters are displayed electronically on TV dinner. It gives you access to all activities for The acronyms correspond to the registered screens in Foyer K and Foyer T, the screens which you have registered. For replacement preconferences. are clustered in 5 stations showing all of lost badges or other badge-related accepted posters. Moderated E-Poster walk matters, visit the EPH Conference Conference hosts sessions (20 in total) are part of the parallel Registration Desk and ask the registration You will recognise our hosts by their programme and held in Foyer T. They are officer. uniform with red scarf / tie or red coloured divided over the two stations indicated as polo shirts. They are happy to help you with ‘Poster walk R’ and ‘Poster walk S’. E-poster your questions. displays are shown on all five stations

102 GENERAL INFORMATION without presentation and moderation. make their own arrangements with respect invitation to join in the creation of new E-posters can be viewed at all times during to health and travel insurance. series of portraits in your country. Ivar the conference. New in the poster Sviestins, photographer, presents his work presentation is the Contact Author button. Internet at the photo wall in the Exhibition Hall on Press the button on the screen send an Free wireless internet is accessible in the Thursday 2 November, 15:30 pm; Friday email to the author. conference centre. Access info: The SSID 3 November, 13:00 pm; Saturday 4 (network) Stockholmsmassan is an open November, 11.30 am. Evaluation network without password. After the conference you will receive Publicity an email with a link to the web-based Language Delegates are not permitted to place or Conference Evaluation Form. Your responses The official language of the conference is hand out publicity materials, flyers, samples will be used to organise even better English. etc. Placing or handing out publicity meetings in the years to come. materials, flyers, samples etc. is only allowed Lost and found by exhibitors at the exhibition stand and by Exhibition Please contact the permanent Information preconference organisers in the allocated Do not miss the exhibition stands in Hall A. desk of the Stockholmsmässan at the meeting rooms. EPH Conference and EUPHA have a stand at entrance. the exhibition. Come and visit us! Smoke-free Mobile phones We are happy to offer an entirely Food Please turn off your mobile phones during smoke-free conference. Delegates that have provided us with their the sessions. specific dietary wishes, can collect their Walking time lunch at the catering buffet in Hall A. Mobility constraints To give delegates time to move from one We are committed to making the 10th EPH session to the next, the programme allows Hearing impaired. Conference accessible to the widest range for 10-minutes walking time in between Rooms K1/2, K11, K21, T1,T2 and Victoria of people possible. If you are a regular sessions. Hall has a hearing loop installed. Attendees wheelchair user you should bring your chair who need to use these can collect with you. The conference venue is equipped headphones at the Stockholmsmässan with elevators. Wheelchair users and information desk in the entrance hall. No disabled participants may need assistance in other rooms has this equipment installed. using the elevators. Please do not hesitate to ask the staff. Insurance The Foundation EPH Conference / EUPHA Photo project Exhibition Hall cannot accept liability for personal Global Photo Project is a photographic accidents or loss of or damage to the study of images from around the world private property of participants and of the human face throughout the lifespan. accompanying persons, either during or With visualized statistics it aims to put indirectly arising from attendance of the face to facts and serve as reference and 10th EPH Conference. Participants should inspiration for our delegates. It is also an

103 FLOOR PLAN First oor Ground oor First oor First oor Ground oorGround oor K16 K16 K16 K2 K2 K2 K-FOYER

K15 K-FOYER K1 K-FOYER Hall A K15 K15 Hall A Hall A K14 K1 K1 Exhibition K14 K14 Exhibition Exhibition K13 RESTAURANT K4 K13 K13 RESTAURANT RESTAURANTThe Parkside K4 K4 K3 The Parkside The Parkside K3 K3 Stairs to (1 st oor) ENTRANCE Meeting rooms M10-M20 K11 K6 K6 first floorK12 (1 st oor) (1 st oor) ENTRANCE ENTRANCE K7 Meeting rooms M10-M20Meeting rooms M10-M20 K11 K12K11 K12 K6 K6 K6 K6 Kiosk K7 K7 Kiosk RegistrationKiosk Registration Registration Room M10-M20 Room M10-M20 Room M10-M20 ENTRANCE Victoria HALL ENTRANCE ENTRANCE ENTRANCE Victoria VictoriaHall HALL HALL RESTAURANTS ENTRANCE ENTRANCE Bar&Coffee C-Café Hall HallPlenary RESTAURANTS RESTAURANTS Bar&Coffee C-Café Bar&Coffee C-CaféK24 Plenary Plenary K24 K24 K23 K23 K23 RESTAURANTS K22 ENTRANCE RESTAURANTS RESTAURANTS K22 K22 ENTRANCE ENTRANCE

K21

K21 K21

T-FOYER T-FOYER

T-FOYER Wrap City T6 Wrap City Wrap City T6 T6 T5 Exhibition and Poster Area T5 T5 Exhibition and PosterExhibition Area and Poster Area T4 T3 Plenary T4 T3 T4 T3 Plenary Plenary Breakouts Breakouts Breakouts Board Room Board Room Board Room T1 T2 Registration T1 T2 T1 T2 Registration Registration 104 ABBREVIATIONS

ARC Aging Research Center, Sweden EUPHA (PR) EUPHA Practice Pillar ASPHER Association of Schools of Public Health in the European Region EUPHA (SGMH) EUPHA Section Sexual and gender minority health BIPS Leibniz Institute for Prevention Research EUPHA (SSWH) EUPHA Section Social security, work and health and Epidemiology, Germany EUPHA (URB) EUPHA Section Urban public health BRIDGE-Health BRidging Information and Data Generation EuroNet MRPH European Network of Medical Residents in Public Health for Evidence-based Health Policy and Research HSR Europe Health Services Research Europe (network) CHAFEA Consumers, Health, Food and Agriculture Executive IMM Institute of Environmental Medicine Agency, European Commission ISS Istituto Superiore di Sanità (National Institute of Health), Italy CHPR Centre for Health Promotion Research, IUHPE International Union for Health Promotion and Education Leeds Beckett University, United Kingdom JA CHRODIS Joint Action on Chronic Diseases and Promoting Healthy DG DEVCO Directorate-General for International Cooperation Ageing across the Life Cycle and Development, European Commission KI Karolinska Institutet DG RTD Directorate-General Research and Innovation, LSHTM London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine European Commission MOCHA Models of Child Health Appraised (project) DG SANTE Directorate-General Health and Food Safety, NCPHWR National Centre for Population Health and Wellbeing Research European Commission NIJZ National Institute of Public Health, Slovenia EC European Commission Observatory European Observatory on Health Systems and Policies ECDC European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control OECD Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development EHESP Ecole des hautes études en santé publique, France PRECeDI Prevention of Chronic Disease (project) EHMA European Health Management Association RCC Regional Cancer Center EPH Conference European Public Health Conference of Stockholm-Gotland, Sweden EPHA European Public Health Alliance RIVM National Institute for Public Health and the Environment, EU European Union The Netherlands EUPHA European Public Health Association ROAM Reproductive Outcomes and Migration (research collaboration) EUPHA (CAPH) EUPHA Section Child and adolescent public health SASM Swedish Association for Social Medicine EUPHA (CHR) EUPHA Section Chronic diseases SBU Swedish Agency for Health Technology Assessment EUPHA (ENV) EUPHA Section Environment-related diseases and Assessment of Social Services EUPHA (EPI) EUPHA Section Public health epidemiology SEI Stockholm Environment Institute EUPHA (ETH) EUPHA Section Ethics in public health SIANI Swedish International Agricultural Network Initiative EUPHA (FN) EUPHA Section Food and nutrition SIDA Swedish International Development Agency EUPHA (HIA) EUPHA Section Health impact assessment SIGHT Swedish Institute for Global Health Transformation EUPHA (HP) EUPHA Section Health promotion Sll Stockholm County Council, Sweden EUPHA (HSR) EUPHA Section Health services research HPH Network Swedish Health Promoting Hospitals Network EUPHA (HTA) EUPHA Section Health technology assessment THL National Institute for Health and Welfare, Finland EUPHA (HWR) EUPHA Section Health workforce research (proposed) TU Berlin Technische Universität Berlin, Germany EUPHA (IDC) EUPHA Section Infectious diseases control UKFAC UK Faculty of Public Health, United Kingdom EUPHA (INJ) EUPHA Section Injury prevention and safety promotion VU UMCA Free University, University Medical Center Amsterdam, EUPHA (LEAD) EUPHA Working Group Leadership in public health The Netherlands EUPHA (MIG) EUPHA Section Migrant and ethnic minority health WHO ECEH World Health organization, EUPHA (ECO) EUPHA Section Public health economics European Centre for Environment and Health EUPHA (PHG) EUPHA Section Public health genomics WHO EURO World Health Organization, Regional Office for Europe EUPHA (PHMR) EUPHA Section Public health monitoring and reporting WHO RHN World Health Organization, Regions for Health Network EUPHA (PHPP) EUPHA Section Public health practice and policy WIV-ISP Scientific Institute of Public Health, Belgium EUPHA (PMH) EUPHA Section Public mental health YFA The Professional Associations for Physical Activity, Sweden EUPHA (PO) EUPHA Policy Pillar YFG Young Forum Gastein

105 NOTES

106 PLENARY AND PARALLEL PROGRAMME

TRACK A B C D E F G H I K L M N O P Q R S ROOM K11 T3 K24 T6 K22 K16 T5 K12 K14 T1 K21 K13 K23 T2 T4 K15 T-foyer T-foyer TRACK NAME COMMUNITIES AND PUBLIC HEALTH POLICY HEALTH INFORMATION HEALTHY LIVING HEALTH PROMOTION HEALTH SERVICES HEALTH SERVICES THE HEALTH INFECTIOUS DISEASES CHRONIC DISEASES MIGRANT AND ETHNIC MENTAL HEALTH CHILD AND ADOLESCENT DIET AND PHYSICAL PUBLIC HEALTH PUBLIC HEALTH AND POSTER WALKS POSTER WALKS ENVIRONMENT AND COMMUNICATION RESEARCH WORKFORCE MINORITY HEALTH PUBLIC HEALTH ACTIVITY MONITORING AND OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH REPORTING Thursday 2 Nov Public Landscapes for Upholding public health Health information The Moral Mandate Transformative health Organizing and Global health and Use of indicators for Vaccinating Europe: Prevention and Control Resource for good. Mental health of LGBTs: Swedish Dentistry From potential to Skills building in HTA: Health literacy in To improve Environmental and 09.00-10.30 Public Health (w) research, policy and is beautiful: of Public Health? promotion: why gender financing public health capacity building (rt) good governance in challenges old and of NCDs: the impact of WHO's toolkit is results from national from a Preventive practice: implement how to address the different countries and cancer care occupational health practice in a future communicating health Back to Basics (rt) stereotypes and culture services in Europe (w) primary health care in new (w) the Natural Experiments strengthening Europe's and cross-European Perspective (w) physical activity referral economic impact populations: approaches DOWNLOADNOTES THE CONFERENCE APP (RT, SBS, W) European Union (w) information through matter (w) the Nordic area (rt) Study (sbs) health response to studies (w) schemes (w) of public health to research (w) infographics (sbs) migration (w) interventions (sbs) Thursday 2 Nov PLENARY: SHARING OUR COMMON WEALTH: THE NEED TO STRENGTHEN THE SOCIAL DIMENSION OF THE EU 11.00-12.00 VICTORIA HALL Thursday 2 Nov LUNCH SYMPOSIUMS AND JOIN THE NETWORKS 12.15-13.15 Thursday 2 Nov PLENARY: WINDS OF CHANGE: FROM PUBLIC TO PRIVATE, FROM COLLECTIVE TO INDIVIDUAL. HOW CAN PUBLIC HEALTH SYSTEMS ADAPT TO A CHANGING WORLD WE PROUDLY PRESENT THE EPH CONFERENCE APP 13.15-14.15 VICTORIA HALL Thursday 2 Nov Neighbourhoods and Public health Causes and effects in Work and health Tobacco (o) Health services Social determinants Work and health (o) Infectious diseases and Inequalities in physical Marginalisation and Mental health and Children and Skills building seminar: The added value of Hospital care: Policies and health Infectious disease 14.25-15.25 communities (p) at large (o) public health (p) status (o) research (o) of health (p) vaccines (o) and mental health (o) health: migrants and cognition (p) adolescents (p) From public health transnational public from avoidance (services) in Europe and homeless people (p) lobbying to Public health training (w) to evaluation (p) worldwide Download the Official App for the 10th European Public Health Conference (O, P, W) Affairs management for or search for ‘EPH 2017’ on Apple App Store or Google Play Store. health: a skills building workshop (sbs) Thursday 2 Nov Urban health and Policies on NCD risk What works for which Work, health and Smoking patterns and Health systems (o) Health services Work and health (o) Innovative approaches Controlling chronic Migrants' health (o) Mental health and sleep Child and adolescent Food, obesity and Systematic reviews and Maternal health (p) Marginalisation Public health 16.05-17.05 physical activity (p) factors (o) disease? (o) sickness absence (p) interventions (p) innovative solutions (p) to address AMR (o) conditions (o) disorders (o) health (p) health (p) methods (o) and migration matters

(O, P) Thursday 2 Nov OPENING CEREMONY OF THE 10TH EUROPEAN PUBLIC HEALTH CONFERENCE 17.15-18.00 VICTORIA HALL Friday 3 Nov Public health Epidemiology and Innovative public Working life and health NCDs, prevention Health care access and Environment and Inequality, employment Infectious diseases: Chronic diseases: Migrant health and Isolation, adversity (Mis)behaviour in Nutrition (p) Population based Sexual health: Health promotion Evaluation of 08.30-09.30 interventions and policy (o) health (p) aspects (p) strategies and the quality (p) health (p) and health status (o) planning and timing of systems of care and intervention (p) and connectiveness in adolescents (o) studies (o) sex work and in different innovation prevention of NCDs (o) SDGs (w) interventions (o) outcome (p) childhood (o) sexuality (o) settings (O, P, W) APP FEATURES INCLUDE: Friday 3 Nov PLENARY: A PARADOX OF PUBLIC HEALTH LEADERSHIP: TOWARDS RESILIENCE IN THE CONTEXT OF VULNERABILITY 09.40-10.40 VICTORIA HALL n Conference Programme Friday 3 Nov From access, to Evidence into policy (o) Animating the SDGs: Disease and work Risk factors in Empowering cost Active Ageing, Work, disabilities and Immunization in a Prevention and Migrant health: Mental health and Lifestyle in childhood Diet across the life Population health Women's and The health of Health behaviour 11:10-12:10 pathways to person experience of applying capacity (p) educational settings (p) accounting for strategic Preventable death (o) changing Europe (p) treatment of settlement and climate change (w) and adolescence (o) course (o) data (o) reproductive health (o) adolescents and n Personalised Programme centered care (o) interlinkages for Global health system Mortality, Injury cardiovascular adaptation (p) young adults (O, P, W) Health (w) decision-making (w) Prevention (p) diseases (p) n Push Notifications Friday 3 Nov LUNCH SYMPOSIUMS AND JOIN THE NETWORKS 12.25-13.25 n Interactive Maps Friday 3 Nov PLENARY: SUCCESSFUL HEALTH INNOVATION: FROM THE ‘WHAT’ TO THE ‘HOW’ 13.40-14.40 VICTORIA HALL n Friday 3 Nov Late Breaker session Strengthening resilience Ferenc Bojan Social security systems Health risks and The patient trajectory (o) Accounting for Occupational health Homelessness and Cancer; risk factors and Migrant and health Psychological resilience Smoking and alcohol use Nutrition and social Public health team Optimization of cancer Work and sickness Burning tobacco Networking with Delegates 14.50-15.50 in communities through Session (o) and health (p) response in school context (o) issues (o) marginalization (o) consequences (p) services (p) concepts, data and in adolescence (o) determinants (o) mechanism (o) screening programs (w) absence and drug issues public health (o) settings (p) challenges for further n Plenary Speakers (O,P, W) research (w) Friday 3 Nov How to make health Public health, then, Energy transition as Toward a definition School tobacco policies Out-of-pocket costs in Promoting health The sustainability Storytelling - A powerful Systematic population Monitoring the health The role of music in Health Literacy in Physical activity, Global health and Data Designing an ERIC on Social inequalities Nutrition, body n List of Delegates 16.20-17.50 promotion in migrant now and in the future: a challenge for public of Good Practices in and adolescents Europe and their effects literacy to facilitate agenda: actions required tool for infectious based targeted CVD of asylum seekers in sustaining resilient and Childhood and healthy ageing and for Decision Making(rt) health information to composition and populations work; 25 years of EUPHA (w) health (w) Public Health: state of smoking: a on health-care use (w) informed decision- to maximize impact disease prevention (w) prevention in primary Europe (w) healthy communities ? Adolescence research. equity: insights from maximize research and maternal health (RT, SBS, W) practical experience in the art and different cross-comparative making by developing across countries and care is effective (w) A Nordic perspective (rt) HLCA empirical AEQUIPA (w) evidence-based n Partners at Stockholm Stockholm (w) experiences (w) European study (w) fact boxes (sbs) regions (w) findings (w) policy-making (w) Saturday 4 Nov Urban environments: Implementing the Civil society governance The Fast Society and Advancing salutogenesis Building resilient health Patient Safety: Ageing society: Climate change and Social Inequalities in Understanding sexual Terrorist attacks and Risk assessment in Healthy and Mapping legal Mapping the European Mental health Mental health n Practical Information 08.30-10.00 action for health and omics evidences into for health: lessons its impact on public for health promotion systems that can Challenges and implications for the mosquito-borne Ageing (w) and reproductive health mental healthcare (w) maternal and child sustainable diets for requirements for HIA knowledge translation equity (w) precision prevention for stronger health health (research) (w) and public health (w) respond effectively to opportunities to keep workforce?: an diseases: from A(edes) to services among migrant health: what, when and European countries (w) institutionalization landscape: Insights from n And much more... (RT, W) and interventions impacts (rt) global health sustainability in the international perspective Z(ika) and more (w) women in Europe (w) how? (w) across Europe (w) EVIP Net (w) programs (w) challenges (w) continuum of care (w) on worker health (w) Saturday 4 Nov Reflecting on Collating evidence in Building resilience and Sickness absence (p) Drugs and alcohol (p) Primary care and shared Primary prevention Disease and risk of Infectious diseases (p) Diabetes: from risk Health inequalities Violence (p) Young people and future Obesity: epidemiology Public healthcare Health workforce Migrant health 10.10-11.10 community practice in public health (p) promoting decision making (p) strategies in action (w) sickness absence (o) factors to therapeutic across regional and mental health (p) and policy (o) workforce: improving health promotion in well-being (w) service (p) social strata (o) quality (p) (O, P, SBS, W) Europe (sbs) Saturday 4 Nov Integration of health Quality strategies Lighting candles, not Fast and clear: how Why, when, and how Future research Primary care in the Public Health Leadership Reducing health Health System responses Terrorist attacks: Appraising Primary Responsible and healthy The cutting edge of Evaluating policy using Chronic disease Nutrition in 11.40-13.10 appraisal within in European health cursing the darkness. to present research to explore stakeholder priorities for more driving seat: how to development: inequalities (w) to migration (w) perceived threat and Care for children and food demand and HTA: Information natural experiments and disability childhood urban planning and systems (w) Applications of health findings in 3 minutes and implementation innovative and accessible create an integrated practice-oriented societal approach (w) adolescents in Europe: supply (w) and Communication and quasi-experimental (RT, SBS, W) environmental impact information across to a non-scientific risks in complex health health services and people-centred interactive follow up of are we measuring the Technologies (w) methods (w) assessments (w) Europe (w) audience (sbs) interventions (sbs) systems (TO-REACH)(sbs) workforce? (w) plenary (rt) right things? (w) Saturday 4 Nov LUNCH AND JOIN THE NETWORKS 13.10-14.10 Saturday 4 Nov PLENARY: PREPARING COMMUNITIES FOR PUBLIC HEALTH EMERGENCIES 14.10-15.10 K1+K2 Saturday 4 Nov CLOSING SESSION OF THE 10TH EUROPEAN PUBLIC HEALTH CONFERENCE 15.10-16.00 K1+K2 O = Oral presentations P = Pitch presentations RT = Round table SBS = Skills building seminar W = Workshop 107

10th European Public Health Conference NOTES OVERVIEW PROGRAMME Sustaining resilient WEDNESDAY 1 NOVEMBER THURSDAY 2 NOVEMBER FRIDAY 3 NOVEMBER SATURDAY 4 NOVEMBER 09:00 – 12:30 09:00 – 10:30 08:30 - 09:30 08:30 - 10:00 Pre-conferences Parallel sessions 1 Parallel sessions 4 Parallel session 8

09:40 - 10:40 10:10 - 11:10 and healthy communities Plenary 3 Parallel session 9

10:30 – 11:00 10:30 – 11:00 10:40 – 11:10 11:10 – 11:40 Coffee/tea Coffee/tea Coffee/tea Coffee/tea 11th European Public Health Conference 2018 12th European Public Health Conference 2019 11:00 – 12:00 11:10 - 12:10 11:40 - 13:10 Ljubljana, Slovenia Marseille, France PROGRAMME Plenary 1 Parallel sessions 5 Parallel session 10 12:30 – 13:30 12:00 – 13:15 12:10 – 13:40 13:10 – 14:10 Lunch for pre-conference Lunch – Lunch symposiums and Lunch – Lunch symposiums Lunch – Join the Networks delegates only Join the Networks and Join the Networks

13:30 – 17:00 13:15 - 14:15 13:40 - 14:40 14:10 - 15:10 Pre-conferences Plenary 2 Plenary 4 Plenary 5

14:25 – 15:25 14:50-15:50 15:10 – 16:00 Parallel sessions 2 Parallel sessions 6 Closing Ceremony

Winds of Change: towards new ways Building bridges for solidarity 15:00 – 15:30 15:25 – 15:55 15:50 – 16:20 of improving public health in Europe and public health Coffee/tea Coffee/tea Coffee/tea

17:00 16:05 – 17:05 16:20 - 17:50 28 November - 1 December 2018 20 - 23 November 2019 End of Programme Parallel sessions 3 Parallel sessions 7

Cankarjev Dom, Ljubljana Marseille Chanot, Marseille 17:15 - 18:00 Opening Ceremony

@EPHConference #EPH2018 @EPHConference #EPH2019 19:00 – 21:00 19:00 – 00:30 Welcome Reception Conference Dinner & Dance Stockholm City Hall Munchen Bryggeriet

1 - 4 November 2017 www.ephconference.eu @EPHconference #EPHStockholm 108 STOCKHOLM