ABHI, the UK industry association for health technology, has launched ABHI Scotland to help Scotland’s healthtech community attract new investment and to bring the work of healthcare innovators to more patients at home and abroad.
Martin Shields
ABHI MOU.Photograph by Martin Shields Tel 07572 457000www.martinshields.com© Martin Shields
The move, which will see the formation of a dedicated operation in Edinburgh, builds on several years of work with companies and universities in Scotland to support and represent ABHI members and the wider healthtech community.
Chair of ABHI Scotland, Mark Cook, who was this year appointed co-chair of the Scottish Government Life Sciences Scotland Industry Leadership Group, says the time is now right for there to be an ABHI team devoted to companies behind medical devices, diagnostics, and digital health in Scotland:
“Scotland has its own routes for HealthTech adoption by the NHS here, alongside distinct attributes that can support the development and diffusion of technologies.
“Scotland’s integrated approach to data, combined with its world-class university and research sector, provides a compelling offer for both export and inward investment.
“ABHI Scotland is a natural next step to build on our work here in Scotland and help us work ever closer with the huge variety of teams developing and supplying everything from camera pills, diagnostic tests and artificial hands to techniques that kill tumours from within for patients here and across the globe.”
The decision is being welcomed as a vote of confidence in Scottish healthtech, with the Scottish Government’s minister for Business, Trade, Tourism and Enterprise, Ivan McKee MSP saying:
“Healthtech is a strategically important part of our life sciences sector which allows us, as a nation, to focus on addressing the world’s biggest health challenges through data-driven health solutions, innovation, design, and manufacture.
“As well as global players who have chosen Scotland as a base, our home-grown companies and university-spin out companies employ over 41,000 highly skilled people in our Life Sciences sector.
“I look forward to continuing to work with ABHI through this new Scottish group, to realise our shared ambition that patients here and across the world will benefit wherever and whenever they can from healthcare innovations.”
ABHI has signed a Memorandum of Understanding to work closely with Strathclyde University’s Institute of Medical Devices centre of excellence.
The Institute’s director, Professor Trish Connolly, who also sits on the board of ABHI, says Scotland benefits from close working between the healthtech sector and academia:
“The strength of this collaboration enables companies to accelerate the creation, development and delivery of products to market both here and abroad.
“The team I work with at the University of Strathclyde understand the needs of the medical devices industry and clinicians and we have a dedicated HealthTech Cluster (HTC) to support our industry-facing research. The HTC allows us to support HealthTech companies of all sizes to make sure they do the right research in the right settings and in the right way to allow them to gain both regulatory approval and the trust of healthcare professionals who will take their solutions to patients. Our framework agreements with the NHS (NHS Lanarkshire and the NHS Golden Jubilee University Hospital) allow us to complete the triple helix of industry-academe-NHS to provide the best research environment for healthtech research.”
ABHI chief executive Peter Ellingworth says the creation of ABHI Scotland represents a natural progression of the organisation’s work in Scotland.
He said: “ABHI is already the leading trade association for Scottish healthtech businesses with knowledge of Scotland’s healthcare landscape and deep connections with the NHS and Scottish and UK governments, which has allowed us to bring the voice of healthtech innovators and suppliers to inform both health and economic policies.
“The creation of ABHI Scotland will allow us to concentrate on continuing to raise awareness of our sector, offer something more to our members in Scotland and help fill a gap for companies in Scotland who felt we weren’t previously for them.”