National Institute for Health Research
The National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) is a UK government body that receives Department of Health (DH) funding to direct and coordinate translational research programmes for the benefit of National Health Service (England) patients in England.
Established in April 2006, under the slogan "improving the health and wealth of the nation through research", the NIHR does not fund any clinical services but does aim to help deliver government responsibilities in public health and personal social services by supporting individuals, facilities and research projects.[1]
The NIHR operates only in England, which accounts for some 50 million of the 60-plus million population of the UK. The round-figure 10 million who live in the other three Home Nations, in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland, live under devolved Governments, which have the autonomy to set their own priorities regarding issues of Health, and which have their own counterparts of NHS England.
Biomedical Research Centres
The NIHR Biomedical Research Centres (BRC) are 'Partnerships' between an 'Academic Partner', usually a research university or similar specialised-institution, and an 'NHS Host', usually in the form of an NHS Foundation Trust. The NIHR BCR were initiated as soon as the NIHR itself was launched, in April 2006, and the original BRCs began work in 2007.
- Objective
The purpose of the BRCs is to make a translational research (TR) path to turn scientific discoveries into medical applications, and then to apply them into daily clinical practice, to make changes that are significant, smooth, immediate and lasting, and so provide better healthcare for all. Basic Research is converted readily into clinical trials to provide bench to bedside Translational Medicine (TM).
- Funding
NIHR BRC funding is in 5-year tranches. The First Tranche cycle ran from 2007-2012, the Second Tranche cycle runs from 2012-2017 and the Third Tranche of funding is now being authorised and allocated to allow the Third Cycle of research to begin in April 2017.
Some £816 million has been allocated by the UK Government in the Third Tranche, for the cycle beginning in 2017. The allocation of the funds to the 20 Third Tranche BCR ranges from just £16 M. for the smallest three allocations (£4 M. to Sheffield; £6 M. to Leeds; and £6 M. to Barts) to some £338 M. for the largest three. (£111 M. to UCLH/UCL; £114 to Oxford - excluding the new Oxford Health BRC; and £114 to Cambridge). The Government estimates the for every £1 invested in medical research, the Partnerships will generate £6.[2]
The 11 Second Tranche grants, awarded in 2011 for the cycle beginning in April 2012, were (rounded-out) as follows:[3]
- £113 M. Imperial.
- £110 M. Cambridge.
- £ 98 M. Oxford.
- £ 98 M. UCLH.
- £ 61.5 M. Marsden.
- £ 59 M. Guy's & St.Thomas'.
- £ 49 M. Maudsley.
- £ 36 M. Gt.Ormond St.
- £ 26.5 M. Moorfields.
- £ 17 M. Newcastle.
- £ 10 M. Southampton.
The 20 Third Tranche grants, awarded in 2016 for the cycle beginning in April 2017, were (rounded-out) as follows:[4]
- £114 M. Cambridge.
- £114 M. Oxford (OUH).
- £111 M. UCLH.
- £ 90 M. Imperial.
- £ 66 M. Maudsley.
- £ 64 M. Guy's & St.Thomas'.
- £ 43 M. Marsden.
- £ 37 M. Gt.Ormond St.
- £ 28 M. Manchester. - a new BRC
- £ 23 M. Nottingham. - a new BRC
- £ 20 M. Bristol. - a new BRC
- £ 19 M. Moorfields.
- £ 16 M. Newcastle.
- £ 14 M. Southampton.
- £ 12 M. Birmingham. - a new BRC
- £ 12 M. Oxford Health. - a new BRC
- £ 11 M. Leicester. - a new BRC
- £ 6 M. Barts. - a new BRC
- £ 6 M. Leeds. - a new BRC
- £ 4 M. Sheffield. - a new BRC
- History
There were originally 11 BRCs, divided between five large 'Comprehensive' BRCs, conducting research across a range of Specialties, and six 'Specialist' BRCs, concentrating on one Specialty as a centre of excellence. In addition, there were 4 NIHR Biomedical Research Units (BRU). Where co-located, the facilities were usually designated: BRC/U.
By the latter phase of the Second Cycle, the benefits of formal coordination and integration were already apparent and significant results had already been reported. The decision was therefore made to increase funding and expand the number of BRCs to bid for the Third Tranche. Whilst some autonomous BRUs were expanded to become full BRCs, several additional BRUs were authorised and the overall number of BRUs has likewise been expanded to 20.[5]
- The Partnerships
From April 2017, there will be 20 BRC:[6]
- the NIHR BRC at Barts Health NHS Trust and Queen Mary University of London (QMUL).
- the NIHR BRC at Cambridge University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust and the University of Cambridge.
- the NIHR BRC at Central Manchester University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust (CMFT) and the University of Manchester.
- the NIHR BRC at Great Ormond St. Hospital for Children (GOSH) NHS Foundation Trust and University College London (UCL).
- the NIHR BRC at Guy's and St. Thomas NHS Foundation Trust and King's College London (KCL).
- the NIHR BRC at Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust and Imperial College London (ICL).
- the NIHR BRC at Leeds Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust and the University of Leeds.
- the NIHR BRC at Moorfields Eye Hospital NHS Foundation Trust and University College London (UCL).
- the NIHR BRC at Newcastle upon Tyne Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust and Newcastle University.
- the NIHR BRC at Nottingham University Hospitals (NUH) NHS Trust and the University of Nottingham.
- the NIHR BRC at Oxford Health NHS Foundation Trust and the University of Oxford.
- the NIHR BRC at Oxford University Hospitals (OUH) NHS Foundation Trust and the University of Oxford.
- the NIHR BRC at The Royal Marsden NHS Foundation Trust and the Institute of Cancer Research (ICR).
- the NIHR BRC at Sheffield Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust and the University of Sheffield.
- the NIHR BRC at the South London and Maudsley (SLaM) NHS Foundation Trust and King's College London (KCL).
- the NIHR BRC at UCL Hospitals (UCLH) NHS Foundation Trust and University College London (UCL).
- the NIHR BRC at University Hospitals Birmingham NHS Foundation Trust and the University of Birmingham.
- the NIHR BRC at University Hospitals Bristol NHS Foundation Trust and the University of Bristol.
- the NIHR BRC at University Hospitals of Leicester NHS Trust and the University of Leicester.
- the NIHR BRC at University Hospital Southampton NHS Foundation Trust and the University of Southampton.
The NIHR BRC at Cambridge Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust and the University of Cambridge: Cambridge BRC:[7]
- 2007: one of the original Comprehensive BRCs.
- 2012: receipt of second tranche: £110 M.
- 2017: receipt of third tranche: £114 M.
The NIHR BRC at Oxford University Hospitals NHS Foundation and the University of Oxford: Oxford BRC (OxBRC):[8]
- 2007: one of the original Comprehensive BRCs.
- 2012: receipt of second tranche: £98 M.
- 2017: receipt of third tranche: £114 M.
The NIHR BRC at Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust and ICL:[9]
- 2007.04: one of the original Comprehensive BRCs, as: ICL and Hammersmith Hospitals NHS Trust and St. Mary's NHS Trust.
- 2017.11: merger of the NHS Trusts to form: Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust.
- 2012: receipt of second tranche: £113 M.
- 2017: receipt of third tranche: £90 M.
The NIHR BRC at University College London Hospitals (UCLH) NHS Foundation Trust and UCL: UCLH/UCL BRC:
- 2007: one of the original Comprehensive BRCs.
- 2012: receipt of second tranche: £98 M.
- 2017: receipt of third tranche: £111 M.
The NIHR BRC at Guy's and St.Thomas' NHS Foundation Trust and KCL:[10]
- 2007: one of the original Comprehensive BRCs.
- 2012: receipt of second tranche: £59 M.
- 2017: receipt of third tranche: £64 M.
The NIHR BRC at The Royal Marsden NHS Foundation Trust and the Institute of Cancer Research, London (ICR): a BCR for Cancer.[11]
- 2007: one of the original Specialist BRCs: the BRC for Cancer.
- 2012: receipt of second tranche: £61.5 M.
- 2017: receipt of third tranche: £43 M.
The NIHR BRC at the South London & Maudsley (SLaM) NHS Foundation Trust and the KCL Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology and Neuroscience (IoPPN) - the Maudsley BRC/U: a BRC for Mental Health & Dementia:[12]
- 2007: one of the original Specialist BRCs: the BRC for Mental Health.
- 2012: receipt of second tranche: £49 M.
- 2012: addition of a BRU: the Dementia Unit. (Maudsley BRC/U for Mental Health & Dementia).
- 2017: receipt of third tranche: £66 M.
The NIHR BRC at Great Ormond St. Hospital for Children (GOSH) NHS Foundation Trust and University College London (UCL).
- 2007: one of the original Specialist BRCs.
- 2012: receipt of second tranche: £36 M.
- 2017: receipt of third tranche: £37 M.
The NIHR BRC at Moorfields Eye Hospital NHS Foundation Trust and the UCL Institute of Ophthalmology: a BRC for Ophthalmology:[13][14][15]
- 2007: one of the original Specialist BRCs: the BRC for Ophthalmology.
- 2012: receipt of second tranche: £26.5 M.
- 2017: receipt of third tranche: £19 M.
The NIHR BRC/U at Newcastle upon Tyne Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust and Newcastle University: a BRC in Ageing and Chronic Disease.
- Newcastle BRC: the BRC in Ageing and Chronic Disease.
- Newcastle BRU: Dementia with Lewy bodies (DLB).
- 2007: one of the original Specialist BRCs: the BRC for Ageing & Chronic Disease.
- 2012: receipt of second tranche: £17 M.
- 2017: receipt of third tranche: £16 M.
The NIHR BRC/U at Southampton Hospital NHS Foundation Trust and the University of Southampton: a BRC for Nutrition.
- includes the Southampton Respiratory BRU.
- 2007: one of the original Specialist BRCs.
- 2012: receipt of second tranche: £10 M.
- 2017: receipt of third tranche: £14 M.
The NIHR BRC at Nottingham University Hospitals (NUH) NHS Foundation Trust and the University of Nottingham and MRC Institute of Hearing Research: a BRC for Hearing:[16]
- 2008: Nottingham Digestive Diseases Centre BRU.[17]
2017: conversion of 2 autonomous BRU into the Nottingham BRC: the Nottingham Hearing Unit (NHBRU) and the Nottingham Digestive Diseases Centre. 2017: receipt of grant: £23 M.
Journals Library
The NIHR open access Journals Library was launched in June 2013. The library expands on the model of Health Technology Assessment and introduces four new journals, each of which publishes the findings of a particular research programme, with full research detail. All results are published, including neutral or negative findings, in an effort to avoid duplication of research effort and as part of NIHR's commitment to transparency.[18]
Specialist Liaison Team
NIHR specialist liaison team works with industry, including companies manufacturing medical devices, diagnostics, biotech and pharmaceuticals, to ensure industry needs concerning clinical research are considered in the development of new infrastructure, processes and practices. It offers support with feasibility assessments, patient recruitment and ethical approval.[19]
Clinical Research Network
The NIHR Clinical Research Network (CRN) comprises: six Topic-Specific Clinical Research Networks, a Primary Care Research Network and a Comprehensive Clinical Research Network. The specific topics are: Cancer, Diabetes, Medicines for Children, Stroke, Mental Health and Dementia & Neurodegenerative Diseases (DeNDRoN).[20] These networks aim to provide the infrastructure to support commercial and non-commercial high quality research in the NHS, including clinical trials.
The CRN's Coordinating Centre (CC) is responsible for managing the overall performance of the Networks. In addition, the Coordinating Centre team develops and delivers streamlined central systems, such as: the NIHR Coordinated System for gaining NHS Permissions (CSP). It undertakes specialist cross-cutting activities to: support the commercial life-sciences industry, develop the research workforce, and promote patient and public involvement in clinical trials.[20] A consortium from: the University of Leeds, Leeds Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust, the Medical Research Council (UK) Clinical Trials Unit and University College London was selected to act as the NIHR CRN Coordinating Centre. The CRN CC has offices in both Leeds and London.
The Mental Health Research Network management is a partnership between: the Institute of Psychiatry and the University of Manchester.[21]
NIHR has partnered with King's College London in establishing the following NIHR centres across the different sites of King's Health Partners: 2 Biomedical Research Centres, including: the Mental Health BRC & Dementia Biomedical Research Unit (BRU); a School for Social Care Research; and 2 Health Protection Research Units, in: Health impact of environmental hazards, and: Emergency preparedness and response. [22]
See also
References
- ↑ "National Institute for Health Research". Retrieved 2010-01-19.
- ↑ https://www.gov.uk/government/news/new-816-million-investment-in-health-research
- ↑ https://www.nihr.ac.uk/about/biomedical-research-centes.htm
- ↑ https://www.gov.uk/government/news/new-816-million-investment-in-health-research
- ↑ https://www.nihr.ac.uk/documents/about-NIHR/NIHR-Publications/NIHR-Annual Reports
- ↑ https://www.gov.uk/government/news/new-816-million-investment-in-health-research
- ↑ cambridge-brc.org.uk
- ↑ oxfordbrc.nihr.ac.uk
- ↑ imperialbrc.nihr.ac.uk
- ↑ guysandstthomasbrc.nihr.ac.uk
- ↑ https://www.cancerbrc.org
- ↑ maudsleybrc.nihr.ac.uk
- ↑ https://www.brcophthalmology.org/
- ↑ https://www.moorfields.nhs.uk/content/nihr-moorfields-biomedical-research-centre/
- ↑ https://www.brcophthalmology.org/speciality-theme/ocular-repair-regeneration-and-pharmaceutics
- ↑ hearing.nihr.ac.uk
- ↑ https://nddcbru.org.uk
- ↑ "NIHR Journals Library". Retrieved 2013-06-21.
- ↑ "Working with Industry". Retrieved 2010-01-19.
- 1 2 "Clinical Research Network - About us". Retrieved 2011-03-30.
- ↑ "Mental Health Research Network". Retrieved 2011-03-30.
- ↑ "NIHR Research Centres". King's College London.