A decade of excellence: Medical innovation takes centre stage at prestigious conference 

People sitting in theatre seats at a conference. On the wall the words

A collaboration between McMaster and the Polish Institute for Evidence Based Medicine, the annual MIRCIM event has grown exponentially in just a decade, bringing together hundreds of experts in internal medicine. (Photo by Sebastian Godziszewski)


Every year, health-care leaders and providers from around the world gather in Kraków, Poland, to share the latest updates in internal medicine. 

And this year, as the McMaster International Review Conference of Internal Medicine (MIRCIM) celebrated 10 years of excellence in medical education, the conference grew to new heights. 

Co-hosted by McMaster University and the Polish Institute for Evidence Based Medicine (PIEBM), MIRCIM brought nearly 700 in-person attendees and 70 expert presenters to Kraków, with another 1,000 participants tuning in online.

It’s the “uniqueness and excellence” of McMaster — the birthplace of problem-based learning and evidence-based medicine — that inspired the conference, says Roman Jaeschke, a professor in McMaster’s department of Medicine and vice-president of PIEBM.  

“We wanted to showcase the knowledge, experience and excellence of McMaster University to the global medical community.”    

Thirteen faculty members from McMaster’s Faculty of Health Sciences were among the featured experts who shared the latest research and clinical insights that are shaping the modern standards in cardiology, pulmonology, gastroenterology, diabetology, endocrinology, nephrology, hematology, rheumatology, and infectious disease 

“Ten years ago, I was involved in the founding of MIRCIM,” said Paul O’Byrne, dean and vice-president of the Faculty of Health Sciences. “At that time, and today, I firmly believe that this international conference is an invaluable opportunity for medical practitioners to learn the latest in research and teaching from global experts and to build valuable relationships that help improve societal health.” 

“The growing attendance of the conference and broad representation of participants and experts reflects the immense appeal of an event that remains grounded in the principles of evidence-based medicine, which was pioneered at McMaster University.” 

 

A grid of three photos, each showing a speaker at a podium.
Left: Akbar Panju, professor of medicine, was awarded honorary membership to the Polish Institute of Internal Medicine. Top right: Nishma Singhal, associate professor, medicine, delivers a lecture on the management of bloodstream infections. Bottom right: Ally Prebtani, professor, medicine, delivers a lecture on diagnosing thyroid disease. (Photos by Michał Łepecki & Sebastian Godziszewski)

This year also marked a first for the conference: A full-day session dedicated to the use of artificial intelligence in medicine, featuring lectures and workshops led by experts from McMaster University, the University of Oxford’s Big Data Institute, the University of Manchester, and Gronigen University’s Medical Centre, among others.   

“There is no doubt that AI will be increasingly present in both the daily work of doctors, as well as in scientific research and in health-care system management,” explains PIEBM president Piotr Gajewski. 

 “We must therefore keep up with the development of AI tools, and the pace of development in this area is already fast.”  

Groups of people sitting around tables for a workshop.
McMaster experts Dan Perri and Sameer Shaikh lead a workshop on leveraging artificial intelligence in their practice. (Photo by Michał Łepecki)

In addition to the lecture and workshop series, the conference also featured the Young Talents in Internal Medicine world contest finals — a unique case competition for 20 members of the next generation of medical innovators.  

Chosen from a pool of 120 doctors from 32 countries, the finalists each had six minutes to present a particularly difficult case they had encountered in their practice, taking the audience through the path they followed from problem to diagnosis, using the best available evidence.   

A large group of young medical practitioners standing on a stage under a screen that reads Young Talent
The Young Talents competition winners were Peter Todd from Scotland (first place), Arthur Renaud from France (second place) and Radwa Genidy from the United Arab Emirates (third place). (Photo by Sebastian Godziszewski)

This year’s conference marked a significant moment of growth for MIRCIM, with in-person attendance growing 43 per cent and online registration up 39 per cent over last year’s event.  

The conference was also livestreamed to medical universities in Uganda, Rwanda and Lesotho, as well as to institutions in Ukraine, including in Kyiv, Lviv and Ternopil, to help ensure broader access to the latest knowledge and best practices.  

a grid of two photos, each of a man in a suit. at the left he is holding a folder and smiling. The man on the right is speaking into a mic.
MIRCIM co-founders Roman Jaeschke, left, and Piotr Gajewski, right. (Photo by Michał Łepecki)

With the conference behind them, Gajewski reflected on the unique event they’ve spent the last 10 years building and refining.  

“From the very beginning, our goal was to create an event that would provide doctors with current and reliable knowledge for use in their daily work,” he says.  

“We’ve managed to create an event that didn’t exist in Poland before — the only conference that brings together international experts, doctors and students from all over the world each year.”  

The team is already looking forward to next year’s conference, hoping to build on the momentum of this milestone year.   

For Jaeschke, it all comes back to McMaster.  

“Over the last 10 years, thanks to MIRCIM and the McMaster Textbook of Internal Medicine, ‘McMaster’ has become a recognizable designation to tens of thousands of health-care professionals and learners around the world” says Jaeschke.  

“We hope to increase this recognition and appreciation of excellence for years to come.”  


If you’re a clinician, medical student, or healthcare professional interested in learning about the latest updates in internal medicine, the conference livestream is available for six months after the conclusion of the in-person events. Click here to register for the online stream or MIRCIM 2026 

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