Medical Community Partners

Innovate UK is the United Kingdom’s innovation agency. It is a non-departmental public body operating at arm’s length from the Government as part of the United Kingdom Research and Innovation (UKRI) organisation. HemoGAD Technologies were awarded a research grant by Innovate UK in April 2019. https://www.gov.uk/government/organisations/innovate-uk

HemoGAD regularly attend, and have presented at, Medilink East Midlands events around working with the NHS..

We are proud to be members of Medilink East Midlands.  Medilink UK is a national health technology business support organisation, part funded by government, to encourage innovation in healthcare: https://www.medilinkem.com

HemoGAD presented our NHS business case at the joint NIHR & AHSN Innovation Surgery and were subsequently invited to join the Accelerator Program

We are working towards a collaboration with a National Health Service psychiatric hospital to look at where iron overload could be a contributory factor to mental health conditions such as treatment resistant depression.

The National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) are the nation’s largest funder of health and care research and provide the people, facilities, and technology that enable research to thrive. In late 2019, HemoGAD were invited to attend a joint AHSN / NIHR Innovation Surgery, where NHS experts provide guidance and advice on how to achieve adoption of your technology into the NHS. https://www.nihr.ac.uk

HemoGAD are collaborating with CHEATA on joint NIHR grant applications to fund further research studies around HH.

The Centre for Healthcare Equipment & Technology Adoption (CHEATA) is part of Clinical Engineering at Nottingham University Hospitals NHS Trust. We offer a unique contract-based support service to clinical, academic and commercial med-tech developers to gather evidence for NHS adoption and to help our clients develop devices that are truly NHS-ready. http://www.cheata.co.uk

HemoGAD have been accepted onto the AHSN / BioCity Accelerator Program for rapid acceptance of new medical devices into the NHS.

There are 15 Academic Health Science Networks (AHSNs) across England, established by NHS England in 2013. As the only bodies that connect NHS and academic organisations, local authorities, the third sector and industry, we are catalysts that create the right conditions to facilitate change across whole health and social care economies, with a clear focus on improving outcomes for patients. https://emahsn.org.uk