Executive Summer School: Health Economics for Health Innovators, Oxford University
Executive Summer School: Health Economics for Health Innovators, Oxford University
Kellogg College Oxford Executive Summer School — Turning Science into Value: Health Economics for Health Innovators 13–15 July 2026 | University of Oxford
CRES-UPF is pleased to share the launch of the Kellogg College Oxford Executive Summer School — Turning Science into Value: Health Economics for Health Innovators — taking place on 13–15 July 2026 at the University of Oxford. This targeted, high-impact programme is designed for professionals shaping the future of healthcare: founders, investors, and operators who recognise that great science alone is no longer sufficient to succeed in today's market.
More information is available at: https://www.kellogg.ox.ac.uk/
The programme equips healthcare investors, founders, and product teams with the full commercial toolkit needed to take an innovation from lab to market. It covers Health Technology Assessment (HTA) — the process governments and payers use to determine whether a new drug or device gets funded and adopted — alongside health and business economics to build the financial case that convinces investors and boards, and healthcare management to navigate the systems, stakeholders, and decisions that determine whether a product ultimately reaches patients.
What participants will gain:
- A practical understanding of how drugs, devices, and digital health solutions get funded, approved, and adopted — and how to position innovations for success
- The ability to build a compelling investment and commercial case, from cost-effectiveness modelling to pricing and budget impact analysis
- A strategic grasp of healthcare systems, procurement, and the decision-makers who control market access
- The confidence to engage investors, payers, HTA bodies, and health system leaders on equal footing
- A ready-to-use business case framework applicable immediately within their organisation
- An Oxford Certificate of Completion and access to a curated network of healthcare innovators and Oxford faculty
Places are intentionally limited to 20 participants to ensure the depth of exchange the programme is designed to deliver.