EHiN 2025, Oslo, Norway

On November 11th–12th 2025, Norway’s leading experts in e-health gathered for the E-Helse i Norge (E-Health in Norway, or EHiN) conference.
The Longevity Initiative’s Andrew Steele took to the stage to deliver the conference’s main keynote, alongside Norwegian Health Minister Jan Christian Vestre and Danish Minister for Elderly Affairs (Ældreminister) Mette Kierkgaard. Andrew introduced the science of longevity, followed by a panel with Sigrid Bratlie of the Norwegian Cancer Society and Langsikt Policy Center, Oslo Cancer Cluster head Ketil Widerberg, and EHiN’s Nard Schreurs, going in-depth on the scientific, social and ethical questions surrounding therapies for ageing—and also how medical records data and AI could help accelerate longevity science.

Andrew also presented signed copies of Ageless to the two ministers—we hope you can find some time to read them!
The conference inspired us to explore the intersection between longevity and e-health, and find new ways for doctors and researchers to use medical records data to do real-time longevity science. Scientists are developing ‘clinical ageing clocks’ that use blood tests and other clinical measurements to predict a ‘biological age’, and we could use medical records data to see how different interventions affect these, and hopefully reduce risk of disease and death. There’s also potential to do trials incorporated into regular care, which could be a cheap and effective way to try out anti-ageing drugs.
We at The LI are planning on thinking more deeply about how we could accelerate this progress—especially in Nordic countries and the UK which have a particular wealth of electronic health data.
More of The LI in the media.



