IMPACT Webinar Series 2026
We are delighted to announce the IMPACT Webinar Series 2026! Once again, the series will feature four engaging webinars, bringing together leading international and Swiss implementation scientists.
Please note that the second webinar will take place in the morning at 9:00 am CEST, as we will be joined by a speaker from Australia. Each session is designed to spark inspiration, offer fresh insights, and foster lively exchange across time zones and career stages.
The first and final webinars are thoughtfully designed to be especially welcoming for new and intermediate participants, while still offering rich and rewarding perspectives for more experienced colleagues. The second and third webinars will bring the entire community together before diving deeper — or soaring higher — depending on your perspective.
We warmly invite you to join us for as many sessions as you wish, live or on demand, thanks to our IMPACT YouTube Channel. We very much look forward to your participation and to another stimulating year of shared learning and dialogue.
1st Webinar: Wednesday, March 25, 2026 – 17:00-18:30 CET
«Making Implementation Science Accessible to Busy Clinicians Using Rapid Evaluation Methods»
Cecilia Vindrola, PhD, University College London, UK
2nd Webinar: Wednesday, May 6, 2026 – 09:00-10:30 CEST (Please note the change in start time)
«Navigating the Path to Successful Intervention Scale-Up: Definitions, Mechanisms, and Approaches»
Harriet Koorts, PhD, Deakin University, Melbourne, Australia
Franziska Zúñiga, PhD, RN, University of Basel, Switzerland
3rd Webinar: Wednesday, September 16, 2026 – 17:00-18:30 CEST
«On the Optimization of Multilevel Adaptive Implementation Strategies (MAISYs)»
Daniel Almirall, PhD, University of Michigan, USA
4th Webinar: Wednesday, December 2, 2026 – 17:00-18:30 CET
«IMPACT Going Back to Basics: A Review of Methodological Building Blocks / Implementation Science Steps»
Marie Schneider, PhD, University of Geneva, Switzerland
Lynn Leppla, PhD, RN, University Hospital of Freiburg iB, Germany & University of Basel, Switzerland