14 November 2016
NHS England Medical Director Professor Sir Bruce Keogh, along with US Digital Health expert Professor Robert Wachter, today, 14 November, have revealed eight health innovations set to join the NHS Innovation Accelerator at an event taking place in London to launch year two of the programme.
In Wessex, the Isle of Wight-based Sgt Paul Jennings, who leads the Serenity Integrated Mentoring (SIM) project, has been confirmed as one of these prestigious fellowships. SIM is a collaborative model of care that sees a specialist, trained police officer working within community mental health teams to better mentor, encourage and support some of the most challenging, complex and high risk service users.
You can find out more about SIM, including watching a video about the work, here. SIM also recently won a prestigious Nursing Times award - you can read all about that here.
Last year, the programme selected 17 innovations and supported their roll out across over 380 NHS organisations, benefiting millions of NHS patients.
Each of the innovations are evidence-based and cost-saving and focus on providing solutions to key challenges facing the NHS, including better prevention of ill health, improved management of long term conditions and early intervention into diseases.
Other innovations selected to join the programme include:
The announcement has been welcomed by NHS England Chief Executive Simon Stevens, he said: "Necessity is the mother of invention, and health care worldwide is now fizzing with smart innovation. In the NHS, we're now taking practical action to develop and fast track these new techniques into mainstream patient care."
The NHS Innovation Accelerator is led by NHS England, delivered in partnership with the country's 15 Academic Health Science Networks (hosted by UCLPartners) who facilitate and support health innovators with getting their innovation rolled out across the NHS.
The accelerator aims to meet the commitment set out the Five Year Forward View to create the conditions and cultural change necessary for proven innovations to be adopted faster and more systematically through the NHS.
Sir Bruce Keogh, NHS England’s National Medical Director, said: "With rising demand and escalating costs, innovation is not an option but a necessity if we are to build a sustainable NHS. The innovations selected for this programme have the potential to deliver better value for the taxpayer whilst making patient interactions with the NHS safer and more personal."
Speaking at the launch event via video link, Professor Robert Wachter, said: “The work you are doing is extraordinarily important. I think it’s the only way that the NHS will be able to achieve the goals of the Five Year Forward View and even beyond that to develop a health care system for the people of England and the UK that delivers the best, highest quality, safest, most satisfying, accessible care for the lowest possible cost.”
Dr Liz Mear, Chair of the AHSN Network, said: “The AHSN Network has huge expertise through its connections across the NHS, academia and industry to deliver innovation at scale across the country. We are delighted to work in partnership with the NHS Innovation Accelerator and look forward to supporting the new Fellows over the coming months as they work to scale their innovations for system and patient benefit.”
Dr Mahiben Maruthappu, NHS England's Innovation Adviser, said: "Innovation is key to a viable NHS. Following a record-breaking year that benefited millions of patients, the NHS Accelerator is now backing 8 ground-breaking innovations, with technologies that can slash mortality rates and save the NHS millions."
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