11 July 2019
UH Bristol hosted research network receives £9million investment
Health researchers in the west country have been given a £9
million award from the Government's Department of Health and Social
Care (DHSC) to enable them to tackle the area's most pressing
health problems. The funding will enable new research projects
including forecasting demand in hospitals, increasing people's
physical activity levels, supporting people who self-harm and
improving outcomes for children in care.
The investment, awarded by the National Institute for Health
Research (NIHR) which is funded by DHSC, will help develop
better health and care through research that aims to address the
immediate issues facing the health and social care system.
The money is part of a larger £135 million award over five years
to 15 pioneering research teams across the country, known as NIHR
Applied Research Collaborations (ARCs).
Professor Chris Whitty, NIHR Lead and Chief Scientific Adviser
to the Department of Health and Social Care, said:
"The unique local collective approach at each NIHR Applied
Research Collaboration will support applied health and care
research that responds to, and meets, the needs of local patients,
and local health and care systems. The network will also be able to
tackle health priorities at a national level."
These ARC teams build on the success of the NIHR Collaborations
for Leadership in Applied Health Research and Care (CLAHRCs), which
the ARCs replace from 1 October 2019. The team in the West, NIHR CLAHRC West has a
strong track record of producing
impactful research with a range of collaborators.
The CLAHRC West team has worked on diverse projects including
evaluating patient safety tools and the roll out of an intervention
to reduce cerebral palsy in premature babies with the West of
England Academic Health Science Network (AHSN), exploring the
experiences of Somali families affected by autism, creating harm
reduction materials with people who inject drugs and improving how
healthcare professionals respond to signs of domestic violence and
abuse.
ARC West will be hosted by University Hospitals Bristol NHS
Foundation Trust (UH Bristol) and brings together universities,
local authorities, NHS trusts, clinical commissioning groups,
voluntary sector and community organisations, alongside patients
and members of the public, to focus on improving health and care
for local people.
Robert Woolley, Chief Executive of UH Bristol and part of the
successful bid team, said:
"Research is the lifeblood of our trust and wider health and
care system. The work my colleagues will undertake in ARC West is
vital and necessary. It will change how we deliver care and public
health interventions.
"Applied research may not get the same attention as new cures or
medical devices. But what it does is tell us how to do things
better, or even stop doing certain things. The ARC West team will
help its partners improve, from hospitals to mental health trusts,
and voluntary sector organisations to local authorities.
Congratulations to John and the team for this latest addition to
the west's impressive research landscape."
John Macleod, Director of ARC West and Professor
of Clinical Epidemiology and Primary Care at the University of
Bristol, said:
"This funding will help us work with our partners for better,
more equitable, appropriate and sustainable health and care across
the West, and is testament to the strength of our local
collaborations. Securing the ARC West funding has been a real team
effort, and it's been an honour to work with the people who have
made our bid a success. I would like to thank everyone involved in
the process.
"I also want to pay tribute to the CLAHRC West team, who have
worked so hard over the last five years to build our reputation for
impactful applied research. I want to especially recognise the
efforts of Professor Jenny Donovan in leading our first successful
CLAHRC bid and then directing CLAHRC West. I am looking forward to
building on the strong foundations that she and the rest of the
team have laid."
Natasha Swinscoe, Chief Executive Officer of the West of England
AHSN, said:
"The announcement of funding for the new ARC West is excellent
news, and we look forward to building on our previous highly
successful collaborations with CLAHRC West.
"We look forward to working closely with ARC West on our future
shared work programme and expect further opportunities for
collaboration to come from the national rollout of ReSPECT, which
supports personalised recommendations for an individual's clinical
care in emergency situations, as well as healthcare innovations
identified through national programmes."
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