Foreword | George Freeman
The NHS as a global resource of healthcare expertise
The British NHS is already respected around the world as a world-class leader in healthcare. With expert capabilities gained through 66 years of experience the NHS is a fantastic resource of healthcare knowledge and technological advancements.
This expertise means the NHS can take a leading role in a broader global push to create more efficient and successful healthcare models. My central mission is to define a world in which
governments can view healthcare as not just a cost to the Exchequer but also as a major economic asset. With ever rising healthcare demands, we need to spend every healthcare pound in a way that delivers more care and creates new markets for innovation that attracts international investment to the UK. We need to move away from thinking of healthcare as something ‘done to us’ by government, but something 21st century “healthcare citizens” have more power over ourselves. Prevention, patient empowerment and precision medicines are the watchwords of 21st century healthcare. Over the last year UK health organisations have
won contracts worth £550m, £200m ahead of target, highlighting the huge global potential of the NHS. With £10.8bn worth of overseas opportunities identified there is confidence that the UK can continue to improve the quality of healthcare delivery to our valued international partners. Life sciences are about manufacturing as well
as research. The production of modern medicines is one of the UK’s leading manufacturing sectors, with exports worth over £22 billion ($35.86 billion). The Medicines Manufacturing Industry Partnership is helping ensure we remain at the forefront of this highly competitive sector, building on the impressive work they have already led in areas like detailed innovation mapping and modern skills investment. Last year I launched a wide-ranging review of the
way new drugs and medical devices are developed and adopted in the UK. The aim is to accelerate patient access to innovation while lowering costs for industry and the NHS. I believe new measures outlined in The Innovative Medicines and Medical Technologies Review could shave years off the time
global-opportunity.co.uk
it takes to bring a drug to market and make the NHS more of a partner in innovation. Key to the strategy will be in aligning the interests
of the pharma, biotech and medical technologies sectors with the publicly-funded National Health Service to improve treatment for patients and boost the economy at the same time. NHS leadership in health research is attracting
new investment into our life sciences research sector, generating the health and wealth we need to be a modern economy. A Minister for Life Sciences is every bit as much about data, diagnostics and devices; and with the advances in genomics, finding cures for diseases will increasingly come from clinicians working much closer with patient data. We will see more personalised drugs, more devices using diagnostics and informatics, transforming the way 21st century healthcare is delivered. I want to ensure that patients up and down Britain
can get access to important medical innovations as soon as possible. By revolutionising the way in which we look at getting medicines and devices into the NHS we will make sure that the UK is the best place in the world for 21st century medical innovation, research, testing and adoption.
George Freeman MP Minister for Life Sciences
The production of modern medicines is one of the UK’s leading manufacturing
sectors, with exports worth over £22 billion ($35.86 billion).’
Issue 01 | Global Opportunity Healthcare 2015 9
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