Tribal Group
ISNI: 0000000403801532
Tribal Group
1 Projects, page 1 of 1
assignment_turned_in Project2006 - 2011Partners:MANCHESTER CITY COUNCIL, Purdue University, BWB Consulting, MaST LIFT, Architects for Health +85 partnersMANCHESTER CITY COUNCIL,Purdue University,BWB Consulting,MaST LIFT,Architects for Health,Mersey Care NHS Trust,LEICESTER CITY COUNCIL,Uni Hospitals of Leicester NHS Trust,Leicester City Council,P and HS Architects,AfH,Unlimited Potential,Willmott Dixon Construction Ltd,Mersey Care NHS Trust,Loughborough University,Wates Construction,Huazhong University of Sci and Tech,Alder Hey Children's NHS Foundation Trust,Manchester City Council,Health Facilities Scotland,Eric Wright Group,West Hertfordshire Hospitals NHS Trust,Berkshire Healthcare NHS Fdn Trust,Tribal Group,Leicestershire County Council,Brighton and Sussex Uni Hosp NHS Trust,Leicestershire County Council,MaST LIFT,University College Hospital,Chalmers University of Technology,MJ Medical,Complexity Solutions Ltd,West Hertfordshire Hospitals NHS Trust,Imperial College London,Manchester City Council,YRM Architects,Mace Ltd,P and HS Architects,Heatherwood and Wexham Park Hospitals,Salford Primary Care Trust,Chalmers University of Technology,Uni of Illinois at Urbana Champaign,Salford Primary Care Trust,Tribal Group plc,IBM (United Kingdom),ArcHealth,WAPMERR,Lend Lease,National Audit Office,Brighton and Sussex Uni Hosp NHS Trust,Bovis Lend Lease,Davis Langdon LLP,National Health Service,Eric Wright Group,Wates Construction,Clean Modules Ltd,MJ Medical,Unlimited Potential,Alder Hey Childrens NHS Foundation Trust,Heatherwood and Wexham Park Hospitals,I B M United Kingdom Ltd,Berkshire Healthcare NHS Fdn Trust,Leicester City Council,Health Facilities Scotland,ArcHealth,West Sussex Primary Care Trust,Inter Academy for Design and Health UK,University Hospitals of Leicester NHS,West Sussex Primary Care Trust,Inter Academy for Design and Health UK,World Agency of Planetary Monitoring and,Complexity Solutions Ltd,University of Illinois,BWB Consulting,Huazhong University of Science and Techn,NHS Health Scotland,YRM Architects,University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign,NHS London,ActivePlan Solutions Ltd,Davis Langdon LLP,PNW,Mace Ltd,University College London Hospital (UCLH) NHS Foundation Trust,University College London Hospitals,Clean Modules Ltd,ActivePlan Solutions Ltd,Willmott Dixon Construction Ltd,NAO,Loughborough UniversityFunder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: EP/D039614/1Funder Contribution: 7,236,670 GBPModernising the UK's health and social care system is a priority for government and for the country as a whole. To do this, wide ranging organisational and funding reforms are being put in place. An unprecedented investment to renew the built and technical infrastructure for delivering care is also underway: new hospitals and primary care centres are being built, information and communication technology is being upgraded and new technologies for diagnosing and treating disease are being introduced. If world-class infrastructure is to be delivered, this investment must achieve its full potential. The aim of HaCIRIC is to establish a new research centre to help accomplish this. HaCIRIC's focus is on the built and technical infrastructure for health and social care, and the interaction between infrastructure specification and the way patients are treated. Improving the way this is planned, delivered and managed is at the core of HaCIRIC's activity. What are the challenges? The health and social care system is one of the most complex and rapidly changing organisational and technical environments in any sector of the economy. Many stakeholders are involved in delivering care, funding mechanisms are convoluted, and patterns of demand and use are changing, as are government health policies. All this places new pressures on the underlying infrastructure. These are compounded by two problems. First, there is an historic legacy of out-dated buildings and cultures within the care system. Second, the life cycles of the various elements of the infrastructure / buildings, medical and information technology / are mismatched. Each involves complex supply chains, multiple users with their own needs and differing institutional and funding arrangements. All these have to be reconciled. For example, the current PFI programme for new hospitals involves supply contracts for thirty years or more, but incorporates technologies which have five year life cycles to help deliver diagnostics and therapies which are undergoing rapid evolutionary change. Modernising the health and social care infrastructure will therefore require innovative approaches. HaCIRIC will help develop the tools and processes which will embed 'innovation as normal business' amongst those responsible for delivering the investment in infrastructure. Its research programme has been developed in partnership with all the key stakeholders from the care system, including the Department of Health, the NHS, the Department of Trade and Industry and the supply industries. Seven research themes have been identified:- Managing innovation in a context of technological change- Procurement for innovation- Innovative design and construction- Care delivery practices- Delivering improved performance through operations management- Knowledge management in complex systems - Design and evaluation of integrated systems HaCIRIC is a collaboration between existing research centres at Imperial College London and the Universities of Loughborough, Reading and Salford. Additional partners from other universities, industry and the care system will be involved in specific research projects. Together this represents a resource valued at more than 11m, of which 7.0m consists of EPSRC support, 2.9m is from the four existing research centres, 500,000 is from the Department of Trade and Industry and 720,000 is from industrial partners. HaCIRIC will therefore represent a substantial resource and a unique capability in skills and knowledge to find solutions to the key healthcare infrastructure problems of the 21st century.
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