NHS Chief launches new fast track funding so NHS patients get treatment innovations faster

17 Jun 2016 02:26 PM

The head of NHS England has announced the launch of a new programme to fast-track cutting-edge innovations from across the globe to the NHS frontline.

In his keynote speech to around 1,000 NHS leaders at the NHS Confederation Conference in Manchester, Simon Stevens will announce that for the first time the NHS will provide an explicit national reimbursement route for new medtech innovations. This will accelerate uptake of new medtech devices and apps for patients with diabetes, heart conditions, asthma, sleep disorders, and other chronic health conditions, and many other areas such as infertility and pregnancy, obesity reduction and weight management, and common mental health disorders.

This new funding route will help cut the hassle experienced by clinicians and innovators in getting uptake and spread across the NHS. This is because a new Innovation and Technology tariff category will remove the need for multiple local price negotiations, and instead guarantee automatic reimbursement when an approved innovation is used, while at the same time allowing NHS England to negotiate national ‘bulk buy’ price discounts on behalf of hospitals, GPs and patients.

Mr Stevens will also announce a new round of recruitment to the NHS Innovation Accelerator (NIA) programme, which supports developers with tried-and-tested innovations to spread them further and faster across the health service.  This follows a successful first year, which saw a rapid roll out of innovations to 68 NHS hospitals, benefitting over 3 million patients.

Examples of innovations supported by the NIA programme which could become routinely commissioned in the NHS:

Mr Stevens said: “The NHS has a proud track record of world firsts in medical innovation – think hip replacements, IVF, vaccinations and organ transplants to name just a few. But then getting wide uptake has often been slow and frustrating. Now – at a time when the NHS is under pressure – rather than just running harder to stand still, it’s time to grab with both hands these practical new treatments and technologies.

“In the rest of our lives we’re seeing the difference that innovative tech makes, and now the NHS will have a streamlined way of getting ground-breaking and practical new technologies into the hands of patients and our frontline nurses, doctors and other staff.  By doing that, we can transform people’s lives.”

This new innovation diffusion funding mechanism is consistent with policy direction expected to be recommended in the Department of Health’s forthcoming Accelerated Access Review.

For the first time the new Innovation and Technology tariff will also provide a clear “route to market” for innovations found to be worthwhile in three of NHS England’s flagship “real world” assessment programmes. These are: