Top infectious diseases & molecular diagnostics conferences in the UK in 2026

Top Infectious Diseases & Molecular Diagnostics Conferences In The UK In 2026

The UK has become one of the most active hubs for infectious diseases and molecular diagnostics conferences in 2026. UKHSA’s genomic surveillance infrastructure, NHS diagnostic networks, the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, and ongoing fallout from the COVID-19 Public Inquiry have all pushed clinical microbiology, pathogen detection, and molecular diagnostics firmly onto the agenda.

From single-day NHS-focused events to multi-day international congresses, the calendar this year is dense. This guide maps the key conferences, who each one serves, and what you can expect from the programming.

Key Takeaways

  • Molecular diagnostics and AMR are converging across most 2026 UK conferences. Genomic surveillance, whole genome sequencing, and point-of-care PCR now feature as standard tracks.
  • The UK’s NHS science community runs several practitioner-focused events. BSMT, BSAC, and IPS conferences serve frontline biomedical scientists, microbiologists, and IPC nurses directly.
  • Several events offer RCPath and CPD accreditation. This is a practical differentiator for biomedical scientists and clinical microbiologists choosing between events.
  • London, Belfast, Birmingham, and Leeds dominate the UK conference map in 2026, with hybrid access available at most major events.

Conferences organized by Veridon Global are not included. No conference paid for placement.

Top 10 infectious diseases & molecular diagnostics conferences at a glance (UK edition)

Below is an overview of the top 10 infectious diseases and molecular diagnostics conferences in 2026, listed by date:

ConferenceDatesLocationBest for
Microbiology Society Annual ConferenceApr 13–16, 2026ICC BelfastBroad microbiology, AMR, virology, diagnostics
18th Euro-Global Infectious Diseases ConferenceApr 16–17, 2026LondonResearchers, clinicians, public health professionals
BSAC Infection 2026Dec 9–10, 2026London (hybrid)Clinical microbiology, infectious diseases
HISCON 2026Jun 23–24, 2026Royal College of Physicians, LondonIPC professionals, clinical microbiologists, HAI researchers
BSAC Spring ConferenceMay 14–15, 2026London (hybrid)Infection management, AMR diagnostics, stewardship
BSMT 41st Annual Microbiology ConferenceMay 21, 2026RAF Museum, Hendon, LondonNHS biomedical scientists, clinical microbiologists
BSAC ARM WorkshopNov 25–26, 2026BirminghamAntimicrobial resistance mechanisms
GIOH 2026Sep 21–23, 2026London (hybrid)ID researchers, One Health, genomics, diagnostics
IP2026 — IPS Annual ConferenceSep 28–29, 2026Royal Armouries, LeedsIPC practitioners, digital IPC, rapid diagnostics
IPC 2026TBC 2026UKIPC nurses, NHS infection control teams

How we compiled and prepared this list

This list was built using the following criteria:

UK focus or UK location: Priority given to events held in the UK or with a strong NHS and UK clinical science audience

Relevance to molecular diagnostics and infectious diseases: Does the event cover PCR, NGS, whole genome sequencing, point-of-care testing, or pathogen identification?

Organizational credibility: Events run by established professional societies (BSAC, Microbiology Society, IPS, BSMT) are weighted higher than commercially organized events

Audience specificity: Does the event serve a clearly defined professional group rather than a generic catchall audience?

CPD or CME accreditation: Noted where confirmed, as this is a practical decision factor for NHS professionals

Conferences organized by Veridon Global are not included. No conference paid for placement.

The 10 best infectious diseases & molecular diagnostics conferences at a glance (2026)

Let’s kick off with the detailed reviews (in no particular order).

1. HISCON 2026 — HIS annual conference

Dates: June 23–24, 2026

Location: Royal College of Physicians, London

Best for:
IPC professionals, clinical microbiologists, HAI researchers, infection specialists, and NHS clinical scientists

HISCON 2026 is the annual conference of the Healthcare Infection Society (HIS), a registered UK charity and one of the most credentialed bodies in hospital infection research. The conference is focused on topical issues in infection prevention and control and is open to anyone working in healthcare-associated infection, prevention, and control.

The 2026 programme features oral presentations from expert invited speakers, offered paper presenters, a larger poster exhibition covering the breadth of IPC, and an expanded exhibition showcasing the latest innovations in infection prevention products and technologies. CPD certificates are available for attendees.

Who attends:
IPC professionals, clinical microbiologists, infectious disease specialists, HAI researchers, infection nurses, NHS clinical scientists, and anyone working in healthcare-associated infection across acute and community settings.

2. BSAC Spring Conference 2026

Dates: May 14–15, 2026

Location: London and online (hybrid)

Best for:
Infectious disease clinicians, clinical microbiologists, pharmacists, researchers, and public health professionals focused on infection management and AMR diagnostics

The British Society for Antimicrobial Chemotherapy (BSAC) Spring Conference theme for 2026 is “Advancing Infection Management: From Global Challenges to Clinical Innovation.” The programme bridges bench science and clinical practice, with dedicated sessions on antimicrobial diagnostics, urinary tract sepsis, HAP/VAP, and carbapenem-sparing treatments.

Sessions are designed to deliver evidence-based learning you can apply directly to clinical decision-making and antimicrobial stewardship. The hybrid format makes it accessible to NHS staff across the UK who cannot travel to London.

Who attends:
Infectious disease physicians, clinical microbiologists, infection pharmacists, GP researchers, and public health professionals. The BSAC membership spans clinicians, scientists, and social scientists working in infection.

3. Microbiology Society Annual Conference 2026

Dates: April 13–16, 2026

Location: ICC Belfast

Best for:
Microbiologists at all career stages, from PhD students to senior academics and NHS scientists

This is the UK’s largest annual gathering of microbiologists. The four-day programme includes scientific symposia, virus fora, a Genetics and Genomics Forum, a dedicated “Knocking Out AMR” session, infection fora, and career development sessions.

Abstract themes for 2026 include artificial intelligence in microbiology, antimicrobial resistance, virology diagnostics, and infectious disease epidemiology. A separate AMR business networking event for companies working on AMR innovations runs alongside the main conference at the same venue.

Who attends:
Academic microbiologists, clinical scientists, NHS laboratory professionals, early-career researchers, PhD students, and industry professionals across microbiology disciplines.

4. BSMT 41st Annual Microbiology Conference

Dates: May 21, 2026

Location: Royal Air Force Museum, Hendon, London

Best for:
NHS biomedical scientists, clinical microbiologists, and healthcare scientists working in diagnostic microbiology

The British Society for Microbial Technology (BSMT) runs this single-day conference specifically for bench microbiologists. Sessions focus on practical diagnostic microbiology: the current state of molecular diagnostics, new technologies for clinical microbiology labs, and the continuing tension between culture-based methods and rapid molecular testing.

The 2026 programme includes a talk on “Current state and the potential future for diagnostic microbiology” from Dr Sarah Pitt (University of Brighton), alongside sessions on domestically acquired infections and AMR surveillance. RCPath CPD credits are available on request.

Who attends:
Senior biomedical scientists, clinical scientists, medical microbiologists, and NHS laboratory professionals. This is one of the most practically oriented UK events for people who run diagnostic microbiology services day-to-day.

5. BSAC Infection 2026

Dates: December 9–10, 2026

Location: London and online (hybrid)

Best for:
Clinical microbiologists, infectious disease physicians, infection pharmacists, and anyone working at the junction of laboratory and clinical practice

BSAC’s winter conference, Infection 2026, brings together the lab and the clinic. Previous editions have featured sessions on molecular diagnostics for virology, AMR surveillance, clinical-pathological case studies, and next-generation sequencing applied to diagnostic microbiology.

The conference has historically attracted consultants from UKHSA, Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust, UCLH, NHS Greater Glasgow, and international collaborators. RCPath CPD accreditation is confirmed for previous editions; 2026 details to follow.

Who attends:
Consultant microbiologists, infectious disease clinicians, infection pharmacists, and trainees in ID and clinical microbiology from across the UK and internationally.

6. BSAC ARM Workshop 2026

Dates: November 25–26, 2026

Location: Birmingham, UK

Best for:
Researchers and scientists focused on antimicrobial resistance mechanisms, surveillance, and laboratory science

BSAC’s Antimicrobial Resistance Mechanisms (ARM) Workshop is an in-person, two-day specialist event. Early bird registration closes June 19, 2026. This is a focused technical event for scientists who want deep discussion on resistance mechanisms, molecular surveillance approaches, and novel methods for resistance detection.

Who attends:
Microbiologists, laboratory scientists, AMR researchers, and pharmaceutical scientists working on resistance detection and characterization.

7. IPC 2026

Dates: TBC 2026

Location: UK

Best for:
IPC nurses, NHS clinical scientists, infection prevention teams, and hospital epidemiologists

IPC 2026 sits at a significant policy juncture. The UK COVID-19 Public Inquiry Module 3 report on pandemic impact on healthcare systems, and the 20th anniversary of the Stoke Mandeville C. difficile report, are both shaping the agenda.

Sessions address HAI surveillance, point-of-care diagnostics for antimicrobial stewardship, and governance lessons from public health inquiries. The speaker line-up includes NHS England’s National Clinical Director for IPC and AMR Diagnostics, clinical scientists from University Hospitals Birmingham, and professors from Cardiff University and Leiden University.

Who attends:
IPC nurses and leads, NHS clinical directors, infection control teams, and healthcare scientists across acute and community care settings.

8. IP2026 — IPS Annual Conference

Dates: September 28–29, 2026

Location: Royal Armouries, Leeds

Best for:
IPC practitioners, microbiologists, epidemiologists, and health system leaders interested in digital tools and rapid diagnostics in infection prevention

The Infection Prevention Society (IPS) annual conference theme for 2026 is “Technical and Digital Innovations: Diagnostics, AI and the Future of IPC.” Sessions cover rapid molecular diagnostics, digital surveillance, robotics, AI applications in infection prevention, and behavioural factors in compliance.

This is the IPS’s flagship annual gathering, drawing professionals from acute, community, and specialist care settings across the UK. Abstract submissions cover quality improvement, research, and real-world practice.

Who attends:
IPC practitioners, microbiologists, epidemiologists, public health professionals, clinical nurses, and health system leaders from across the UK and internationally.

9. 18th Euro-Global Infectious Diseases Conference

Dates: April 16–17, 2026

Location: London, UK

Best for:
Researchers, clinicians, epidemiologists, and early-career scientists seeking a broad international forum in London

This two-day conference covers the full spectrum of infectious diseases, with dedicated sessions on molecular tools and diagnostics in infectious disease management. Sessions address PCR and next-generation sequencing for pathogen detection, AI-assisted diagnostic interpretation, and point-of-care diagnostics in resource-limited settings.

Programming includes oral and poster presentations, panel discussions, and industry-led workshops. Accepted abstracts are published in the associated Conference Series journals.

Who attends:
Researchers, clinicians, microbiologists, epidemiologists, public health professionals, and pharmaceutical industry representatives.

10. GIOH 2026 — Global Infectious Diseases & One Health Conference

Dates: September 21–23, 2026

Location: London, UK (hybrid)

Best for:
ID researchers, genomics scientists, public health professionals, and clinicians interested in the One Health approach to infectious diseases

GIOH 2026 runs under the theme “From Breakthroughs to Preparedness: The Next Era of Infectious Diseases.” The conference is CPD-accredited and covers molecular biology, genomics, digital biosurveillance, AI-driven disease prediction, and outbreak preparedness.

Sessions address human, animal, and environmental health in an integrated One Health framework. The hybrid format enables broad international participation. Topics include emerging pathogen detection, genomic tracking, mobile diagnostic devices, and cross-border coordination.

Who attends:
Infectious disease researchers, clinical scientists, veterinarians, public health officials, data scientists, and policymakers working across human, animal, and environmental health.

What to look for across these conferences

Several themes appear consistently in 2026 UK conference programming:

Whole genome sequencing and molecular surveillance have moved from specialist research topics to mainstream clinical practice discussions. UKHSA’s national sequencing capability means NHS professionals now need to understand how these tools integrate with diagnostic workflows.

Point-of-care molecular testing is a persistent theme. The gap between central laboratory PCR capacity and rapid bedside diagnostics is an active area of debate at events from BSMT to IP2026.

AMR diagnostics, specifically how laboratory data informs stewardship decisions, runs through nearly every UK conference on this list, from the BSAC ARM workshop to the Microbiology Society’s Knocking Out AMR sessions.

AI in diagnostics has moved from novelty to practical agenda item. IP2026’s 2026 theme names it explicitly; BSMT sessions address digital PCR and automated platforms; and GIOH covers AI-driven surveillance.

Planning your 2026 UK conference calendar

The conferences above cover every professional working in the UK’s infectious diseases and molecular diagnostics ecosystem, from bench microbiologists and biomedical scientists to IPC nurses and AMR researchers.

A practical approach for 2026: if your work is primarily laboratory-focused, the BSMT conference (May 21) and BSAC’s two events (May and December) give you the most credentialed NHS-specific content of the year.

If your focus is infection prevention practice, HISCON 2026 (June), IPC 2026, and IP2026 (September) together provide the most comprehensive NHS programming, with governance, diagnostics, AI, and antimicrobial stewardship all covered. If you work across the full research spectrum, the Microbiology Society Annual Conference (Belfast, April) and GIOH 2026 (London, September) offer the broadest scientific programming.

Check each conference’s official website for registration deadlines, CPD details, and abstract submission windows, as several open early in the year.

FAQs

1. Which UK conferences specifically cover molecular diagnostics techniques like PCR, NGS, and whole genome sequencing in infectious diseases?

BSMT (May 21, London), BSAC Infection 2026 (Dec 9–10, London), and IP2026 (Sep 28–29, Leeds) all include dedicated sessions on molecular diagnostics technology, including PCR platforms, NGS applications, and digital surveillance tools.

2. Which 2026 UK infectious diseases conferences offer RCPath CPD accreditation for biomedical scientists?

The BSMT 41st Annual Microbiology Conference (May 21) is RCPath registered. The Microbiology Society Annual Conference (Apr 13–16, Belfast) is RCPath CPD approved. BSAC Infection 2026 has historically carried RCPath CPD credits; confirm directly with BSAC for 2026 details.

3. Are there UK infectious diseases conferences suitable for NHS frontline staff with limited travel budgets?

BSMT (single-day, London, from £75 early bird) and DECON UK (single-day, Wolverhampton) are the most cost-accessible options. BSAC and IP2026 both offer hybrid attendance for staff who cannot travel in-person.

Which UK conferences focus on the intersection of diagnostics and antimicrobial stewardship

BSAC Spring Conference (May 14–15), the BSAC ARM Workshop (Nov 25–26), and IPC 2026 all explicitly address how molecular diagnostics data feeds into antimicrobial stewardship programs and clinical decision-making.

5. How do society-run UK conferences differ from commercially organized infectious diseases events?

Society-run events (BSAC, Microbiology Society, IPS, BSMT) are typically structured around peer-reviewed content, professional development, and the needs of their specific membership. Commercially organized events tend to have broader, more general programming and are often more accessible to early-career or industry-based attendees.

#MolecularDiagnostics
#ClinicalMicrobiology
#AMR
#Genomics
#InfectiousDiseases
#UKHealthcare


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Top infectious diseases, sterilization & decontamination conferences in 2026

Top 10 Infectious Diseases, Sterilization & Decontamination Conferences To Attend in 2026

The infectious diseases, sterilization, and decontamination conference circuit in 2026 is the most active it has been since the pandemic. Antimicrobial resistance (AMR) is on track to cause 10 million deaths per year by 2050 (source). The EPA’s revised ethylene oxide (EtO) emissions standards are forcing sterile processing teams to re-evaluate their entire workflows.

Post-pandemic scrutiny of infection prevention and control (IPC) governance has intensified across health systems globally.

The number of events has grown alongside the urgency. This guide covers the key conferences to help professionals match their goals to the right events, from front-line NHS sterile services teams to pharma researchers and public health leaders.

Key Takeaways

  • Antimicrobial resistance dominates 2026 programming. Multiple dedicated AMR conferences have launched or expanded this year, including the inaugural IMARI.
  • Sterilization professionals face a specific regulatory moment. EPA EtO reconsideration and FDA compliance pressure are driving conference agendas at events like the Sterilization Summit USA.
  • Hybrid formats are now standard. Most major conferences offer virtual attendance, widening access for international participants.
  • Conference location shapes who you meet. US events concentrate pharma and regulatory contacts; UK and European events connect you with NHS leaders, MHRA stakeholders, and EU policy professionals.

How This List Was Compiled

To get the most out of this list, you must understand how it was prepared.

This list was built using the following criteria:

  • Scientific standing: Does the event feature peer-reviewed content or speakers from credentialed institutions?
  • Relevance to current challenges: Does it address AMR, sterilization regulation, decontamination technology, or HAI prevention?
  • Audience representation: Does it bring together academics, clinicians, industry, and regulators?
  • Geographic and role diversity: Does the list serve professionals across the US, UK, Europe, and Asia-Pacific, and across career stages?
  • Actionability: Does the programming go beyond theory to offer practical guidance?

No conference paid for placement.

Also read: 10 Best Infectious Diseases, Sterilization & Decontamination Conferences In The UK In 2026

Here’s an overview of the top infectious diseases, sterilization & decontamination conferences:

ConferenceDatesLocationBest For
IDAMR 2026Jun 25–26, 2026London, UKID physicians, AMR researchers, health economists
IDWeek 2026Oct 21–24, 2026Washington D.C., USAID clinicians, hospital epidemiologists, trainees
IMARI 2026Jan 28–30, 2026Las Vegas, USAAMR researchers, drug developers, policymakers
Sterilization Summit USATBC 2026USASterile processing teams, device manufacturers
ISAAR 2026Jun 12–14, 2026Hong KongAsia-Pacific ID and AMR researchers
DAS 2026Apr 29, 2026Solihull, UKNHS decontamination and sterile services teams
IPC 2026TBC 2026UKUK-based IPC nurses, hospital epidemiologists
IP2026Sep 28–29, 2026Leeds, UKIPC practitioners, microbiologists, health system leaders
DECON UK 2026Apr 24, 2026Wolverhampton, UKSterile services managers, decontamination leads
Infection 2026Jun 25–27, 2026Barcelona, SpainID specialists, epidemiologists, public health leaders

10 Infectious Diseases, Sterilization & Decontamination Conferences to attend (2026)

Let’s kick off with the detailed reviews.

1. IDAMR 2026

When: June 25–26, 2026

Where: London, UK

What makes it essential: The 4th World Congress on Infectious Diseases and Antimicrobial Resistance positions itself around the economic and clinical urgency of AMR. The infectious disease diagnostics market is projected to exceed $40 billion by 2028. Sessions cover next-generation antibiotics, diagnostics innovation, surveillance methodology, and antimicrobial stewardship program design.

Best for: ID physicians, pharma R&D teams, health economists, and researchers focused on antimicrobial resistance and diagnostics

Who attends: ID physicians, pharma and biotech researchers, health economists, microbiologists, and policymakers working across infectious disease science and commercial health strategy.

2. IDWeek 2026

When: October 21–24, 2026

Where: Walter E. Washington Convention Center, Washington D.C., USA (hybrid available)

What makes it essential: IDWeek is the joint annual meeting of IDSA, SHEA, HIVMA, and PIDS. It is the largest infectious diseases gathering of the year in the US. Sessions span antimicrobial resistance, healthcare-associated infections (HAIs), HIV, emerging pathogens, and infection prevention and control.

Up to 12 AMA PRA Category 1 CME credits are available. General registration opens June 2, 2026. The conference also includes a dedicated IDBugCrawl program for medical students and residents, and a NextGen ID Lounge for early-career professionals.

Best for: Infectious disease physicians, hospital epidemiologists, ID pharmacists, microbiologists, and trainees

Who attends: Clinicians, researchers, public health professionals, trainees, and pharmacists working across the full spectrum of infectious diseases.

3. IMARI 2026

When: January 28–30, 2026 (completed; watch imari.org for next edition)

Where: Las Vegas, Nevada, USA

What makes it essential: IMARI is a new conference launched jointly by the American Society for Microbiology (ASM) and IDSA. The inaugural edition took place in January 2026. Its focus is narrow and deliberate: antimicrobial resistance drug discovery, development, and the translational steps in between.

Sessions cover resistance mechanisms, AI-powered molecule design, public-private partnerships in AMR R&D, and regulatory pathways for new antimicrobials. The program is designed to attract early-career AMR researchers alongside established scientists and industry leaders.

Best for: AMR researchers, antimicrobial drug developers, clinical microbiologists, and health policy professionals

Who attends: Bench scientists, clinical microbiologists, pharma R&D teams, government agencies, and policymakers working on the AMR pipeline.

4. Sterilization Summit USA 2026

When: TBC 2026

Where: USA

What makes it essential: The Sterilization Summit USA focuses on the practical and regulatory pressures reshaping hospital sterilization services. The EPA’s 2024 tightening of ethylene oxide (EtO) emissions standards and its 2026 proposed reconsideration are driving much of the agenda. Smaller device manufacturers face real supply chain disruption if EtO facilities exit the market.

Sessions compare sterilization modalities, cover AI-driven cycle monitoring, address FDA compliance documentation, and examine alternatives to EtO including hydrogen peroxide vapor and UV-C approaches.

Best for: Sterile processing teams, hospital supply chain leads, medical device manufacturers, and regulatory affairs professionals

Who attends: Sterile processing department managers, infection prevention leads, medical device manufacturers, and regulatory affairs teams navigating EtO-related compliance changes.

5. ISAAR 2026

When: June 12–14, 2026

Where: Hong Kong Convention and Exhibition Centre, Hong Kong

What makes it essential: ISAAR is organized biennially by the Asia Pacific Foundation for Infectious Diseases (APFID), co-organized with the Hong Kong Society for Infectious Diseases and the Hong Kong Society for Microbiology and Infection. The theme for 2026 is antimicrobial resistance as a cross-border challenge.

The program draws on co-chairs from the Mayo Clinic and Samsung Medical Centre, alongside regional clinical and academic networks. For professionals working with Asian trial infrastructure or tracking how AMR stewardship is evolving outside Western healthcare systems, this is the most authoritative Asia-Pacific event of 2026.

Best for: Infectious disease clinicians, microbiologists, and public health researchers in or connected to the Asia-Pacific region

Who attends: Microbiologists, ID clinicians, pharma scientists, public health researchers, and policymakers across the Asia-Pacific region.

6. DAS 2026

When: April 29, 2026

Where: National Conference Centre, Solihull, UK

What makes it essential: DAS (Decontamination and Sterilisation Conference) is the UK’s primary event for sterile services and decontamination professionals. Programming is practice-oriented: endoscope reprocessing risks, biofilm challenges, sustainable decontamination methods, and the case for migrating from disinfection to sterilization of flexible endoscopes.

The conference exhibition includes live technology demonstrations. Sessions are designed for both frontline staff and national leaders. Attendance is drawn from NHS trusts, independent providers, and equipment suppliers across the UK and beyond.

Best for: NHS sterile services teams, decontamination leads, clinical scientists, and infection control nurses

Who attends: Sterile services managers, decontamination leads, infection prevention nurses, theatre nurses, and clinical scientists working in NHS and private healthcare.

7. IPC 2026

When: TBC 2026

Where: UK

What makes it essential: IPC 2026 brings together NHS leaders, frontline IPC practitioners, and clinical scientists. The 2026 edition sits at a significant policy moment: the UK COVID-19 Public Inquiry Module 3 report on the pandemic’s impact on healthcare systems is expected to shape several sessions, alongside the 20th anniversary of the Stoke Mandeville C. difficile report.

Sessions address HAI surveillance, point-of-care diagnostics for antimicrobial stewardship, decontamination innovations, and governance lessons from health inquiries.

Best for: IPC nurses, NHS clinical scientists, hospital epidemiologists, and infection prevention professionals at all levels

Who attends: IPC nurses and leads, NHS clinical directors, infection control teams, and healthcare scientists working across acute and community care settings.

8. IP2026

When: September 28–29, 2026

Where: Royal Armouries, Leeds, UK

What makes it essential: IP2026 is the Infection Prevention Society (IPS) Annual Conference. The conference theme for 2026 is “Technical and Digital Innovations: Diagnostics, AI and the Future of IPC.” Sessions cover rapid diagnostics, digital surveillance, robotics, AI in infection prevention, and behavioural factors in compliance.

The IPS has operated since 1970 and now represents over 2,000 healthcare professionals. Abstract submissions cover quality improvement, research, and real-world practice across acute, community, and specialist care.

Best for: IPC practitioners, microbiologists, epidemiologists, behavioural scientists, and health system leaders

Who attends: IPC practitioners, microbiologists, epidemiologists, nurses, public health professionals, and health system leaders from across the UK and internationally.

9. DECON UK 2026

When: April 24, 2026

Where: Molineux Stadium, Wolverhampton, UK

What makes it essential: DECON UK 2026 is a one-day conference jointly run by Wolverhampton NHS Trust, University Hospitals Birmingham NHS Foundation Trust, and Walsall Healthcare NHS Trust. The focus is practical decontamination education: endoscopy, procurement, waste management, and sustainability in sterile services.

It suits professionals who want applied, NHS-specific guidance in a compact format, without the scale of larger national events.

Best for: Sterile services managers, decontamination leads, endoscopy teams, and procurement professionals

Who attends: Sterile services managers, decontamination leads, theatre nurses, endoscopy staff, IPC teams, and procurement and waste management professionals.

10. Infection 2026

When: June 25–27, 2026

Where: Barcelona, Spain (hybrid available)

What makes it essential: Infection 2026 is the 10th edition of the World Congress on Infectious Diseases, running under the theme “New Frontiers in Infectious Diseases: Diagnosis, Treatment, and Control.” The program spans bacterial, viral, fungal, and parasitic infections, with tracks on emerging pathogens, infection control, and therapeutic advances.

The hybrid format enables virtual participation for international attendees who are unable to travel to Barcelona. Programming includes keynote sessions, oral and poster presentations, and interactive workshops.

Best for: Infectious disease specialists, epidemiologists, immunologists, and public health researchers seeking a broad international program

Who attends: ID specialists, epidemiologists, immunologists, public health researchers, and clinicians across all career stages.

What Most of These Conferences Have in Common

A few topics appear consistently across 2026 conference agendas:

Antimicrobial resistance (AMR) is the dominant theme

Nearly every conference on this list has dedicated sessions on resistance mechanisms, stewardship programs, and the pipeline for new antimicrobial treatments.

Post-pandemic IPC accountability is shaping UK events in particular

The COVID-19 Public Inquiry and the anniversary of C. difficile are prompting structured reflection on governance and practice.

Sustainability in sterile services is a growing trend

Events like DAS 2026 and DECON UK address how NHS teams can reduce environmental impact without compromising decontamination standards.

AI and digital tools are featured across clinical and sterilization conferences alike

From AI-driven sterilization cycle monitoring to digital surveillance in infection prevention, technology is reshaping every corner of the field.

FAQs

Which conferences are most relevant for professionals who generate real-world evidence for infectious disease programs?

RWE Connect Summit (Boston, Oct 14–15) is built specifically for RWE and HEOR professionals, translating infectious disease and outcomes data into regulatory and market access decisions.

Where can sterile processing professionals find guidance on ethylene oxide alternatives and FDA compliance in 2026?

The Sterilization Summit USA covers EtO regulatory changes, alternative sterilization modalities, and FDA compliance strategy. DAS 2026 and DECON UK address similar challenges within the NHS context.

Which 2026 conference focuses on antimicrobial resistance in the Asia-Pacific region?

ISAAR 2026 (Hong Kong, Jun 12–14) is the primary Asia-Pacific forum on antimicrobial resistance, organized biennially by the Asia Pacific Foundation for Infectious Diseases alongside regional microbiology and ID societies.

Are there UK-specific infection prevention conferences that address NHS governance and pandemic lessons?

IPC 2026 and IP2026 (Leeds, Sep 28–29) both focus on NHS infection prevention practice. IPC 2026 directly addresses the UK COVID-19 Public Inquiry Module 3 findings and the Stoke Mandeville report anniversary.

How do these sterilization and decontamination conferences differ from broader infectious disease events?

Sterilization and decontamination conferences focus on equipment, processes, regulatory compliance, and operational challenges for sterile services teams. Broader infectious diseases conferences focus on clinical management, AMR, epidemiology, and treatment. The two audiences overlap in infection prevention and control but have distinct programming priorities.

#InfectionPrevention
#Decontamination
#SterileServices
#AMR
#NHS

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