National centre for clinical excellence of the uk là gì năm 2024

The National Institute for Clinical Excellence [NICE] was established on 1 April 1999, as a special health authority by order of the secretary of state, to promote clinical excellence in the health service. It aimed to support the reduction in variation of the availability and quality of NHS treatments and care nationally.

NICE was responsible for producing guidelines for the management of clinical conditions, providing advice on when to refer specialist cases, and for producing guidance on the use of medicines, medical equipment and clinical procedures. NICE considered the clinical evidence, as well as cost effectiveness, of particular interventions or technologies.

It was responsible for appraising new technologies including drugs [health technology assessments] and, from 2003, to assess whether interventional procedures used for diagnosis were appropriate for routine NHS use.

NICE was controversial from the outset. There was an inevitable conflict between those who felt that any life was worth prolonging, despite the cost, and those who welcomed a prioritisation process for spending NHS resources.

The organisation also produced guidelines for the management of clinical conditions and had a role in encouraging quality improvement. NICE inherited four confidential inquiries covering:

  • maternal deaths
  • stillbirths and deaths in infancy
  • perioperative deaths and suicides
  • homicides by people with mental illness.

The responsibility for the inquiries was later transferred to the National Patient Safety Agency.

Later inclusion of public health

On 1 April 2005, NICE joined with the Health Development Agency and extended its work to include public health, leading to a change in name to the National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence [still abbreviated as NICE]. Its objectives expanded to include improving outcomes for people by providing national guidance and advice in England.

The Health and Social Care Act 2012 made NICE a non-departmental public body that was operationally independent from the Department of Health. Since then, NICE has taken on the role of producing quality standards for social care and revised its name to the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence.

We fund, enable and deliver world-leading health and social care research that improves people's health and wellbeing, and promotes economic growth.

NIHR launches £50m ‘Challenge’ funding to tackle inequalities in maternity care

The new call will invest in research to tackle inequalities in maternity care. The funding call will establish a diverse research consortium to deliver research and capacity building over five years.

Project funding

We fund a variety of commissioned, researcher-led and themed call research:

  • in health, social care and public health
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Career development

We support the development of professionals through:

  • personal awards including Fellowships
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Making a Difference

Preventing early heart disease in high-risk patients

Use of new software developed with NIHR funding is identifying more patients at high risk of early heart disease and heart attacks. Earlier diagnosis and treatment are saving lives and shaping healthcare policy.

Programmes

Applied health and care research on both commissioned and researcher-identified topic areas.

Research Infrastructure

Find out more about our expertise, specialist facilities, research delivery workforce and support services.

Specialty therapy areas

The NIHR funds and supports research:

  • in all specialty therapy areas
  • delivered by expert clinical leaders and practitioners
  • through effective collaboration

Global Health Research

NIHR is a major funder of high quality global health research that directly addresses the diverse health needs of people in low and middle income countries [LMICs].

Journals, publications and data

Explore NIHR-supported research projects, their findings and data from our range of resources:

  • 5+ journals and publications for the public, care and research professionals
  • 3+ open access health research databases

NIHR annual statistics show over one million participants took part in research in England last year

New figures suggest the public's appetite for taking part in research remains remarkably high after an unprecedented period in research history.

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