Department Of Health
- Projects will look at how artificial intelligence (AI) and other innovative technologies can detect overdoses to alert healthcare professionals, family and local communities to provide emergency life-savingsupport topeople who use drugs
- Technology to support those in need and contribute towards Prime Ministers priority to cut waiting lists
People at risk of drug deaths could be saved by overdose detecting AI or antidote dispensing drones after the government awarded a share of 5 million to projects aimed at tackling fatal overdoses.
As part of the Reducing Drug Deaths Innovation Challenge, which aims to reduce drug-related deaths across the UK, the Office for Life Sciences is investing in 12 promising projects to develop technologies aimed at improving detection, response or intervention in potential drug-related deaths.
It supports the addiction mission, one of the governments healthcare missions targeting the biggest healthcare challenges, including through funding innovative research into improved treatments and life-saving technologies to accelerate their development and rollout.
Building on the Vaccine Taskforce model, which led to one of the most successful vaccine roll outs in the world and ensured millions got a COVID-19 jab, the government will continue to harness world-leading research expertise, remove unnecessary bureaucracy, strengthen partnerships and support the new healthcare challenges.
More widely, funding will help the Prime Ministers objective to improve urgent and emergency care and increase the resources available to healthcare professionals to treat drug overdoses.
Minister of State for Health Will Quince said:
Drug use has a devastating impact on peoples health, their families and their livelihoods and every year over 4,000 people in the UK die from an avoidable drug overdose.
We want to stop people taking these substances and support them to recover from their addictions, while preventing those most at risk from dying from overdoses.
This fund forms part of our healthcare mission programme as we take a Vaccine Taskforce style approach to some of the biggest challenges facing our society today, backed by over 200 million.
This challenge is also being delivered in partnership with the Scottish Government as part of their National Mission on Drugs.
The winning projects will operate across all 4 nations of the UK and range from AI technologies to detect overdoses, to emergency systems using drone technology to deliver antidotes, and wearable technologies such as smart watches or breathing monitors to detect overdoses and alert healthcare professionals, family or members of the community to the need to intervene.
Eleven projects have been awarded up to 100,000 each to launch 4-month feasibility studies to develop prototypes, with one additional project securing up to 500,000 for a year-long demonstration study to collect real-world evidence with residents of homeless accommodation. The studies will begin in September. Any of the feasibility studies that show promising results will be able to apply for up to 500,000 grants to carry out follow-on 12-month demonstration projects starting in May 2024 to evaluate and collate real-world evidence of their technology with people from population groups most at risk of overdose.
This funding supports wider government initiatives to tackle drug misuse in society. The UKs drugs strategy, published in December 2021, has a key objective to prevent 1,000 drug deaths in England by 2025. This aligns with work within and across the 4 nations of the UK to improve systems of support and reduce drug-related deaths. The Addiction Mission, as part of this strategy, is aiming to enhance the UK-wide research environment and incentivise the development of innovative and effective new treatments, technologies and approaches to support recovery, and reduce the harm and deaths addiction can cause.
Professor Dame Anna Dominiczak, Chief Scientific Advisor for Health, Scottish Government, said:
Professor Dame Anna Dominiczak, Chief Scientific Advisor for Health, Scottish Government said:
It is encouraging to see some of the innovative solutions that are being supported through the Reducing Drug Deaths Innovation Competition, and the partnership between the Chief Scientists Office in Scottish Government and the UK Office for Life Sciences.
Tackling drug-related deaths is a huge priority for the Scottish Government and NHS Scotland, and we are committed to tackling these issues through targeted research, innovation and support. Recent figures showed a reduction in drug-related deaths in Scotland to the lowest annual total since 2017 but the number of deaths remains far too high.
Utilising the expertise in Scotland and across the rest of the UK, we will continue to focus on harm reduction, developing impactful innovations and driving prevention initiatives.
Science, Innovation and Technology Minister, George Freeman, said:
Every single death from drug misuse is a tragedy, which has an awful impact on that persons loved ones and community - and thousands every year are avoidable with better detection and faster intervention.
The UK is already a world leader in much of the work this 5 million challenge will support - from our 94 billion life science sector through to our AI industry which supports 50,000 jobs, backed by our record 20 billion for R&D.
Now it is vital we use our world leading position to prevent overdoses and save lives. This runs to the core of what our science superpower ambition is all about: tackling some of the biggest problems facing society so we can all live healthier, happier, safer lives.
Background information
This challenge is being run by the Scottish Governments Chief Scientist Office, which has invested 500,000 of the funding, in partnership with the Office for Life Sciences, which has invested the remaining 4.5 million of the funding. NHS Fife will be leading on the programme management for this innovation challenge.
The competition has been designed in close consultation with the Welsh Government and Northern Ireland Executive to increase the potential for uptake and use of these life-saving innovations in all parts of the UK. All UK nations are represented as either applicants or collaborators who are leading the successfully funded projects.
The central objective of this competition is to develop innovative technologies that help to reduce drug-related deaths and harm across the whole of the UK and help people who use drugs and their support networks to work together to save lives. This will support in delivering on the UKs drugs strategy, From harm to hope: a 10-year drugs plan to cut crime and save lives, and the Scottish Governments National Mission on Drugs.
In January 2021, the Scottish Government announced a National Mission on Drugs. The aim of the national mission is to reduce drug deaths and improve the lives of those impacted by drugs in a programme of work supported by the Drug Deaths Taskforce and National Mission on Drugs plan. The demand-signalling work of the Chief Scientist Office innovation team based upon the Care and Wellbeing Programme, identified tackling drug-related deaths as a key priority area for innovation in NHS Scotland.
More detail on the winning projects and selection process:
- Saving SAM: System for Alert and Monitoring of Potential Overdoses - eMoodie in partnership with the University of Edinburgh and NHS Scotland Health Innovation South East Scotland (HISES). This project will design and develop Saving SAM: an AI-enabled drug overdose monitoring system to enable both self and responder digital alerts
- DoseCare: Development and Evaluation of a Wearable-Integrated, AI-Powered Overdose Detection and Response System - Manchester Metropolitan University in partnership with Queens University of Belfast, Drug and Alcohol Research Network (Northern Ireland) and the Salvation Army. This project aims to harness the power of AI to revolutionise overdose detection and prevention mechanisms in healthcare. By focusing on 2 distinct user groups with varying levels of risk awareness, they intend to develop tailored solutions that significantly improve patient outcomes and enhance overall care delivery utilising wearable technologies and smart phone applications
- Ultra-portable fast-dispersal buccal naloxone for constant carriage: testing feasibility and acceptability - Kings College London in partnership with Catalent, Accord Health, Scottish Drug Forum, Scottish Families affected by Alcohol and Drugs (SFAD), DrugFAM and South London Academic Health Science Network (AHSN). Naloxone is an opioid overdose antidote, however, existing naloxone products are bulky and have very low carriage rates. This feasibility project will examine a proposed ultra-portable fast-disp