DTN Ireland has announced that Dr. Emma Wilmot will deliver the keynote address at the DTN Ireland Diabetes Technology and Research Conference, taking place on Friday May 22nd, 2026 at the Croke Park Conference Centre.
This flagship meeting brings together healthcare professionals, researchers, and industry to explore the latest advances in diabetes technology, evidence-based care, and structured education, with a strong focus on translating innovation into clinical practice.
Dr. Wilmot is an Associate Professor at the University of Nottingham, Honorary Consultant Diabetologist in Derby, and Founder of the Diabetes Technology Network UK. She is internationally recognised for her leadership in advancing access to modern diabetes treatments and digital tools, while also contributing extensively to research on type 1 diabetes, early-onset type 2 diabetes, and glycaemic control, with a strong track record of translating research into real-world improvements in care.
Her keynote comes at a pivotal time in the evolution of diabetes technology, following her role as senior author of the RADIANT trial published in The Lancet Diabetes & Endocrinology, which supports the growing clinical case for automated insulin delivery systems.
As highlighted by Dr. Tomás Griffin:
“DTN Ireland will be an unmissable event for healthcare professionals, clinicians, and researchers with an interest in the future of diabetes care. With Dr Emma Wilmot as keynote speaker, this promises to be a high-quality, practice-changing meeting, and I would strongly encourage colleagues to attend.”
The programme will also feature expert-led sessions on automated insulin delivery, diabetes in pregnancy, immunotherapy, and reducing diabetes-related hospital admissions.
The event takes place on Friday 22nd May, 2026 in Dublin, bringing together colleagues at the forefront of diabetes technology, research, and clinical innovation.
CPD has been applied for, with accreditation pending for Royal College of Physicians of Ireland and Nursing and Midwifery Board of Ireland.
For queries, contact 01 8428118 or email info@diabetes.ie.



