Join Virtually or in Berlin: GSA Engages in NCDs and AMR Discussions at World Health Summit Side Events

Breaking the Silos: Primary Healthcare as the Bridge between NCDs and IDs

On October 13, Prof. Konrad Reinhart, GSA Founding President and President of the Sepsis Stiftung, will join a panel of experts at an event organized on the side of the World Health Summit by the Infectious Disease Alliance (IDA) and co-hosted by other organizations, including FINDUNICEFAmref, and the Global Sepsis Alliance.
At the event “Breaking the Silos: Primary Healthcare as the Bridge between NCDs and IDs”, Prof. Reinhart will shed light on the strong link between non-communicable diseases and sepsis and the need to integrate early sepsis detection and effective treatment in primary healthcare and in relevant healthcare strategies.

The panel will be co-moderated by Simone Mancini, GSA Partnership Lead and Coordinator of the Regional Sepsis Alliances.

Time: Oct 13, 2025, 7:00 AM - 9:30 AM CEST

Venue: Berlin, “Tuechtig – Raum für Inklusion”, Oudenarder Straße 16, Haus D06, 13347 Berlin, Germany

Full Program and Free Registration

Push, Pull, Partner: Building a Global AMR Incentive Ecosystem

GSA Partnership Lead, Simone Mancini, will also intervene at another event organised on October 14 by IDA and co-hosted by GSA, and will give a talk about the synergies and paradoxes of two crucial aspects of the fight against infectious diseases: sepsis and antimicrobial resistance.

Time: Oct 14, 2025, 9:30 AM - 11:30 AM CEST

Venue: Berlin, “Tuechtig – Raum für Inklusion”, Oudenarder Straße 16, Haus D06, 13347 Berlin, Germany

Full Program and Free Registration

We invite all stakeholders visiting Berlin for the World Health Summit to join these fascinating discussions, either in person in Berlin or via the free livestreams on YouTube.

Marvin Zick
GSA CEO Dr Mariam Jashi to Join the 2025 Virchow Prize Lecture

The Global Sepsis Alliance is pleased to announce that Dr. Mariam Jashi, CEO of the Global Sepsis Alliance, will participate as a panelist in the Virchow Prize Lecture 2025 on October 10, 2025, at ESMT Berlin and online via livestream.

Hosted by the Virchow Foundation and ESMT Berlin, the lecture will honor the 2025 Virchow Prize Laureates, Prof. Quarraisha Abdool Karim and Prof. Zulfiqar A. Bhutta, recognized for their pioneering, lifelong leadership in advancing maternal, newborn, and child health equity through community-centered, evidence-based research.

This year’s event will focus on the urgent need to advance equity in women’s, maternal, newborn, and child health, emphasizing holistic, systems-based approaches that connect gender, health, and development. The discussion will explore integrated strategies to strengthen global health systems and promote equity, contributing to the achievement of the Sustainable Development Goals 3, 5, and 10.

The Virchow Prize Lecture 2025 takes place on 10 October 2025, 11:00 - 12:30 CET, at ESMT Berlin and via livestream.

Register here


Katja Couball
Sepsis Forum 2025 – Bench, Bedside, Beyond – Join Virtually on October 23, 2025

We are thrilled to announce that our President, Prof. Niranjan ‘Tex’ Kissoon, is moderating a session on engaging communities in sepsis prevention and policy at this year’s Sepsis Forum 2025.

Sepsis Forum is a unique and innovative meeting bringing together academics, industry, patients, and families with lived experience and funders to share information and insights to advance sepsis awareness and understanding and improve outcomes.
— Prof. Niranjan 'Tex' Kissoon, President, Global Sepsis Alliance

The Sepsis Forum is a collaborative event that brings together researchers, healthcare providers, and survivors to drive innovation and equity in sepsis care.

Co-hosted by the Pacific Northwest Sepsis Conference, the University of British Columbia’s Action on Sepsis Research Cluster, and partners, the Forum fosters cross-disciplinary conversations and shared learning across science, clinical care, and lived experience. This year’s forum will take place virtually on October 23, 2025, from 8:00 to 14:15 Pacific Time.

This year’s event explores timely topics, including artificial intelligence in early detection, personalized approaches to sepsis guidelines, improved coding and classification systems, multidisciplinary post-sepsis care, and community-driven advocacy. By creating an inclusive space for discussion and collaboration, Sepsis Forum aims to advance education, policy, and outcomes for all those impacted by sepsis.

Program & Registration
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Marvin Zick
29th International Symposium on Infections in the Critically-Ill Patient – Barcelona – October 16-17, 2025

On October 16–17, 2025, our colleagues from the Código Sepsis Foundation will host the 29th International Symposium on Infections in the Critically Ill Patients (ISICIP 2025) in Barcelona and virtually.

The Global Sepsis Alliance is delighted to endorse this congress and encourages you to participate.

Registration is now open (both online and in person), and the preliminary program is available on the event website.

More Info & Registration
Download Program (PDF)
Marvin Zick
Upcoming Webinar: Management of Adult Sepsis in Resource-Limited Settings

The Asia Pacific Sepsis Alliance (APSA), in collaboration with the Global Sepsis Alliance, invites you to a 90-minute global webinar on the Delphi Study on Clinical Guidance for Sepsis Management in Resource-Limited Settings, taking place on 30 September 2025 at 18:00 AEST (Sydney time).

This webinar is part of the educational series on the Delphi study and builds on the recently published Global Expert Consensus on Sepsis Management in Resource-Limited Settings.

The session will feature presentations by Sheila Myatra, Prashant Nasa, Brett Abbenbroek, and Louise Thwaites, followed by a panel discussion and Q&A moderated by Louise Thwaites. Participants will gain insights into the study background, findings, and new practice statements on managing sepsis in resource-limited settings.

This webinar is kindly supported by a medical education grant from bioMérieux.

Join the Livestream on YouTube
Download Full Program (PDF)
See the Time in Your Time Zone
Katja Couball
Now Live from New York: UNGA80 Side Event on Sepsis and NCDs

We are now live from New York with “Sepsis and NCDs  – A Hidden Link in Global Health”, our parallel Side Event to the 80th Session of the United Nations General Assembly (UNGA80). Join high-level policymakers, global health leaders, sepsis advocates, and scholars live on YouTube.

Join the Free Livestream on YouTube Now
Download Program (PDF)

Please use the chat function on YouTube to ask questions and interact with us. The event recording will be available immediately after the livestream has concluded.



Why Sepsis and NCDs?

Sepsis is among the leading causes of mortality, disability, and healthcare expenditures worldwide, responsible for approximately 20% of all annual deaths. According to the latest estimates from the Institute of Health Metrics and Evaluation (IHME) and the University of Oxford, in 2021, Sepsis, as an immediate or intermediate cause, was related to 21 million deaths, including 4 million deaths associated with or attributable to AMR. A reinvigorated Sepsis response is essential to accelerate progress towards health-related SDG 3 and 8, other Sustainable Development Goals.

15.8 million Sepsis cases, and 5.1 million Sepsis-related deaths annually arise from infections as complications/exacerbation of NCDs or injuries. Though the intersection of Sepsis with non-communicable diseases is often overlooked in global health dialogues. People living with NCDs – such as diabetes, cancer, cardiovascular disease, and chronic respiratory illnesses – are significantly more vulnerable to infections and, consequently, to Sepsis. At the same time, Sepsis Survivors often experience long-term sequelae, including the development or exacerbation of NCDs.

This bi-directional relationship underscores the need to integrate Sepsis prevention, early detection, and management into NCD strategies and broader UHC and health system strengthening efforts.


Objectives of the Side Event

This side event will spotlight the overlooked Sepsis–NCD link and mobilize coordinated, cross-sectoral action by: 

  1. Reaffirming the urgency of political leadership for scaling up the 2030 Global Agenda for Sepsis to prevent 12 million new cases of Sepsis and avert 2 million avoidable deaths.

  2. Emphasizing the critical need for reinvigorated Sepsis responses at global, regional, and national levels to achieve health-related SDGs – including aspirations for UHC and NCDs.

  3. Raising awareness of the clinical and policy links between Sepsis and NCDs within the context of Universal Health Coverage and SDG 3.

  4. Promoting the recognition of the NCD-Sepsis nexus and the need for integration of Sepsis prevention and management in national NCD strategies and UHC packages.

  5. Discussing strategies to catalyze political leadership, funding, and partnerships for the 2030 Global Agenda for Sepsis, including scalable models that link Sepsis and NCD care,  especially in LMICs.


Target Audiences

  • UN Member States and permanent missions

  • WHO and other UN agencies

  • Civil society organizations, patient groups, and health advocates

  • Researchers and academics

  • Development partners and philanthropic organizations

Marvin Zick
Spanish Minister Mónica García Favourable to the Development of a National Plan

On 10 September, Prof. Marcio Borges, Head of the Multidisciplinary Sepsis Unit at Son Llatzer University Hospital in Palma de Mallorca and President of the Código Sepsis Foundation, and Marianne Haverkamp, Chair of the ESA Patient and Family Support WG and of the GSA Global Sepsis Survivor and Families Committee, met with Mónica García, Minister of Health of Spain, to discuss the set-up and development of a National Plan for Sepsis. Also present from the Ministry were María Rosario Fernández, Deputy Director General for Healthcare Quality, and José Manuel López Rodrigo, Chief of Staff of the Ministry of Health.

The aim of the meeting was to strengthen the collaboration with the Ministry on educational and healthcare initiatives while raising awareness about sepsis, a severe clinical syndrome that, despite its impact, remains largely unknown to the public.

Sepsis in Spain

Sepsis affects between 75,000 and 138,000 people in Spain annually and causes around 17,000 deaths —more than breast, colon, and prostate cancer combined. However, awareness of sepsis in Spain remains low.

A recent survey by Sepsisinfo.es and the Código Sepsis Foundation revealed that 52% of Spaniards do not know what sepsis is, 65% underestimate the number of deaths it causes annually, and one in four respondents do not recognize its symptoms, such as fever, confusion, or rapid breathing.

Strategic Proposal for a National Plan

During the meeting, the Código Sepsis Foundation and SepsisInfo.es proposed the creation of a National Plan for Sepsis to the Ministry of Health. The Foundation already has a strategy drafted and approved in 2016, which covers diagnosis, monitoring, and treatments, and will serve as the foundation for the new national plan. This initiative seeks to address the problem in a multidisciplinary and comprehensive way.

The proposal, structured into six strategic areas, includes prevention and awareness, healthcare provision, educational measures, as well as rehabilitation and follow-up for survivors. Marianne Haverkamp emphasized the need of the active participation of patients and families in such plan.

Since 2012, several scientific societies and experts have developed different actions and documents for comprehensive and multidisciplinary sepsis care, making Spain one of the first countries in the world to do so. Since 2015, Sepsis Code Programs have been implemented in over 65% of Spanish hospitals across all regions, some with their own specific strategic approaches.

These programs rely on multidisciplinary teams, including more complex multidisciplinary sepsis units—currently more than 25 nationwide. Evidence from literature and practice shows that these programs reduce sepsis-related mortality, shorten hospital stays, and lower associated costs, estimated at €17,000–€25,000 per episode.

Post-sepsis syndrome (PSS), affecting 40% of survivors with long-term consequences, was a key element of the proposal, as most patients currently receive no structured follow-up or support. The proposal also highlighted the high economic burden of sepsis for the healthcare system, estimated at €10,000–€18,000 per hospital episode.

Conclusion and Next Steps

The Minister and her senior team welcomed the proposal very positively, stressing its importance and the need for a national plan to address sepsis. They agreed on further follow-up meetings to continue working on the implementation of the proposed measures and to better understand the current situation, including actions already underway and the activity of sepsis groups and units.

Collaboration between the Ministry, regional governments, scientific societies, patient associations, and civil society will be essential to strengthen and generate new actions to improve sepsis care, thereby continuing to reduce mortality and healthcare resource use in tackling this complex clinical syndrome.

About the Código Sepsis Foundation

The Código Sepsis Foundation promotes a collaborative framework for healthcare professionals engaged in social and healthcare interventions for sepsis. Its objectives include creating a continuous educational system to enhance knowledge among professionals, raising social and economic awareness of the problem, and facilitating a shared multidisciplinary analysis of the significance and impact of sepsis. The Sepsis Code, which covers everything from diagnosis to supportive treatment, is based on a healthcare, educational, and research approach.

About SepsisInfo.es

SepsisInfo.es is an outreach platform offering accurate and accessible information on sepsis, its symptoms, prevention, treatment, and recovery, aimed at the general public, patients and families, as well as healthcare professionals.

 
Código Sepsis Foundation
SepsisInfo.es
Katja Couball
WHO Regional Director for Europe, Dr Hans Kluge supports ESA's calls for a European Sepsis Plan

At the occasion of the event United Against Sepsis, organised in Brussels on 9 September by the European sepsis patient organisation consortium Sepsis Stronger Together, the Belgian patient organisation Sepsibel, and the European Society for Intensive Care Medicine (ESICM), Dr. Hans Kluge, Regional Director of WHO Europe delivered a strong message calling European member states to act against sepsis and welcoming the efforts of the European Sepsis Alliance. Referring to the ESA Call to Action delivered at the European Parliament last March, Dr. Kluge calls for:

A European Sepsis Plan

The inclusion of sepsis in the European preparedness and medical countermeasure strategies

Dr. Kluge also exhorts European governments to put in place national sepsis strategies and close the gap between planning and action.

The Global Sepsis Alliance is grateful for the continued support of Dr Kluge and of WHO Europe, and we look forward to joining effort and working together towards national and European sepsis plans.

We invite our member organisations and partners to share this powerful message widely.

Simone Mancini