Loughborough Echo

New centre of excellence at the NRC

- DAVID GODSALL david.godsall@reachplc.com

A NEW partnershi­p of academic experts from across the UK will spearhead efforts to maximise innovation and collective knowledge at the National Rehabilita­tion Centre (NRC) near Loughborou­gh.

This new centre of excellence will be co-located with the specialist centre for Armed Forces rehabilita­tion which opened in 2018 at Stanford Hall.

Loughborou­gh University and the University of Nottingham, joined by a network of 24 other education and research establishm­ents from across the UK, are leading the work.

The newly-formed body is called the NRC Clinical and Academic Partnershi­p – and is now starting its work.

Miriam Duffy, NRC programme director, said: “The impact of COVID-19 highlights the criticalit­y of having a worldclass R&D and innovation capability to enable the very best treatments and care.

“There has always been a need for good clinical rehabilita­tion and this newly-formed partnershi­p will help to engineer excellence in ways which have never been possible before and are more relevant now than ever.

“We are talking about integratin­g research, education, training and innovation in a purpose-planned new facility which also delivers direct patient care. The opportunit­ies to raise the bar and make a meaningful difference across clinical rehabilita­tion care are simply tremendous.”

To set up the partnershi­p, the NRC invited bids and responses were received from all over the UK. Following the strength of the submission­s, it was agreed that Loughborou­gh University and the University of Nottingham would collaborat­e and lead the partnershi­p together – allowing the NRC to benefit from their complement­ary specialism­s.

Both Loughborou­gh University and the University of Nottingham are preeminent and world-leaders in this field.

The partners will be working with the Nottingham University Hospitals NHS Trust, which is the NHS sponsor for the NRC and future provider of clinical services at the NRC, to drive up standards in research, education and clinical care. Getting patients and clinicians to set research priorities and work with industrial partners will be a great advantage of this clinical academic partnershi­p.

The potential for innovation is substantia­l with the partnershi­p ambitious to push forward real improvemen­ts to clinical care, covering 3D printing of prostheses through to wearable technologi­es and medical devices to enable the developmen­t of cutting-edge treatments and assistive technologi­es, ultimately aiming to tackle future healthcare challenges.

Professor Mark Lewis, Dean of Loughborou­gh University’s School of Sport, Exercise and Health Sciences said: “We are excited to be co-leading this consortium – the world-leading research and education expertise we have will be used to transform education and training within rehabilita­tion and provide patient health benefits through advanced rehabilita­tion pathways and techniques.”

The target is for the National Rehabilita­tion Centre to open in 2024 (subject to formal adoption of the business case at the end of this year which is currently being developed).

The first tasks for the consortium are to now develop a research strategy for rehabilita­tion together with a long-term workforce plan for the NRC.

The idea for a National Rehabilita­tion Centre facility was fundamenta­l to the concept of the DNRC programme from the outset. The COVID-19 pandemic has simply added to the relevance and rationale for investing in creating a stronger overall capability in this important area of clinical care.

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