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SBRI HEALTHCARE

Guidance for Applicants - Competition 27

These Guidance Notes complement the Invitation to Tender document, the Challenge Brief and the Template Application form, and are designed to help you complete your application to the SBRI Healthcare Programme. You can find all documents on the Competition pages.

Funding prerequisites

The following funding prerequisites apply to all applications and will be considered by the reviewers.

  1. A commitment to involve members of the public and patients in the design and management of the research, evaluation or study.

  2. A commitment to actively engage in tackling healthcare inequalities, and in supporting diversity and inclusion, by including communities where the proposed innovation will make the biggest impact.

  3. A commitment to make steps towards contributing to the overall carbon neutral strategy for the NHS.

Guidance for completing your application on the Research Management System (RMS) Portal

These notes should be read alongside your application as they are designed to help you provide the information required.

Please keep the use of acronyms to a minimum. Only use acronyms where a term is mentioned frequently throughout the proposal. If you choose to use an acronym, do not assume that the reader knows what it means, and be sure to define it, bearing in mind that individual sections of the application may be read separately during the selection process.

In order for your application to be accepted, you must submit the minimum required information. This information includes all mandatory fields from the application form (as indicated with a red asterisk next to questions). If you do not complete this information, you will not be able to submit your application.

We ask that all participants in the application (Team Members, Sub-Contractors, and Clinical Partners) have approved accounts on the Research Management System so that they can be added to the application form. Please ensure you leave enough time for this – we recommend registering at least 7 days in advance of the competition deadline.

If you do not have all the answers you need to fully complete the application, you may save your progress using the ‘Save and Close’ button and return to the application process at a later date.

Guidance on the individual sections of the application form is provided in the following sections.

Section 1: Application Summary

Section 1: Application Summary

Information entered into this section provides a summary of your application.

Application title
Please provide the title for the project. This should be descriptive, concise and contain keywords relevant to the project. Any abbreviations should be spelled out in full.

Sub-challenge selection
Please select the appropriate sub-challenge addressed by your innovation.

Sub-challenge 1: Digital interventions targeting work-related risk factors facing the working age population (aged 16-64) with mental health problems in employment, that provide rapid support to individuals to help them remain in work

Sub-challenge 2: Digital interventions that specifically tackle barriers to work facing unemployed working age individuals (aged 16-64) with mental health problems, to support individuals to return to work or gain employment

Sub-challenge 3: Digital interventions targeting workplace issues/barriers facing the working age population (aged 16-64) from disadvantaged communities with mental health problems, to support individuals attain, remain or return to work 

Host organisation
Please name the organisation that will be responsible if the project is funded. Including management of the funding, project deliverables and arising intellectual property. If your organisation is not on the list, please email sbri@lgcgroup.com. We recommend you do this as soon as possible and at least 7 days in advance of the competition deadline in order to have your organisation approved in time.

Contract duration
Enter the length of the desired SBRI Healthcare contract as a number of months (up to 12 months maximum).

Total contract cost (NET)
This will be auto-populated based on the information provided in Section 6.

The funding limit for each project is £200,000 excluding VAT

Name of innovation
Please provide the name of the proposed innovation.

Type of innovation
Please choose the most appropriate description of the innovation using the dropdown list provided. If “Other” is selected, please provide a short description of the innovation. Please note, this competition is specifically targeting digital innovations.

Technology readiness level (TRL)
Please choose the most appropriate TRL of the innovation using the dropdown list provided.

Health category
Please choose the most appropriate health category related to your application using the dropdown list provided.

Health Innovation Network involved in the project
Please select all that apply from the list provided.

Health Innovation Network role
Please describe the role of the HIN in the project, or write N/A (max 100 words).

Section 2: Host Organisation Details

Section 2: Host Organisation Details

Complete details relevant to your organisation. Please choose from the dropdown list where provided.

  • Host organisation website

  • Company registration number (for those in the UK)

  • Region (where the host organisation is registered, using the dropdown list provided)

  • Type of organisation

  • Host organisation size

  • Host organisation status

  • Annual turnover (max 10 words)

Section 3: Plain English Summary

Section 3: Plain English Summary

A plain English summary is a clear explanation of your project. The plain English summary may be used to inform reviewers, including experts who might not have specialist knowledge of your field as well as public members/patients who might review your funding application. If your application for funding is successful, the summary may be used on the SBRI Healthcare website.

Please make sure your summary is free of technical jargon, easy to read, and provides an overview of your proposal.

It is helpful to involve patients / carers / members of the public in developing a plain English summary.

When writing your summary consider including the following information where appropriate:

  • aim(s) of the project

  • background to the project

  • design and methods used

  • patient and public involvement

  • dissemination

The plain English summary is not the same as a scientific abstract, please do not cut and paste this or other sections of your application form to create the plain English summary.

Section 4: Project Plan

4.1 Description of proposed technology/device/service and expected outcomes

Please provide a narrative description for what the innovation is and how it addresses the theme AND sub-challenge selected.

  • The following should be provided:

  • A brief description of the proposed solution

  • What is the problem that the solution aims to address and how does this meet the published challenge brief?

  • What are the expected outcomes of the project?

  • How will the solution benefit patients, the NHS and/or Social Care sector and the wider market?

4.2 Description of the innovation’s evidence accumulated to date

The programme supports innovations that plan to meet relevant regulatory standards and generate a strong evidence base. For this reason, innovators are encouraged to make sure that they are aware of the specific compliance requirements for their innovation (e.g., CE marking, UKCA, relevant ISO certifications, etc.). For any digital intervention, the NICE Evidence Standards Framework should be consulted and your application should evidence your plan to meet the appropriate evidence guidelines. Evidence that the NHS Digital Technology Assessment Criteria (DTAC) has been considered should be demonstrated in your proposal.  

Technical Standards that should be considered from the beginning to ensure safety by design are listed below: 

The product must be clinically safe for use within the NHS

  • Compliant with DCB0129  
  • Clinical risk management system 
  • Undertaken Clinical Risk Management activities for this product 
  • Clinical Safety Case Report and Hazard Log 
  • Clinical Safety Officer (qualified and appropriately registered)  
  • Registered with the Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA) and Declaration of Conformity or certificate of conformity issued by a Notified Body / UK Approved Body if product falls within the UK Medical Devices Regulations 2002, and all of these for any third-party component 

The product must collect, store and use data safely and securely

  • Registered with the Information Commissioner 
  • Data Protection Officer 
  • Compliant (having standards met or exceeded status) with the annual Data Security and Protection Toolkit Assessment 
  • Data Protection Impact Assessment (DPIA) relating to the product 
  • Store and process data (including any third-party products your product uses) within the UK, if outside of the UK compliant with current legislation 

The product must meet industry best practice security standards and is stable

  • Cyber Essentials Certificate (every 12 months) 
  • External penetration test including Open Web Application Security Project (OWASP) Top 10 vulnerabilities from within the previous 12-month period 
  • Security review of all custom code, 
  • All privileged accounts have appropriate Multi-Factor Authentication (MFA) 
  • Logging and reporting requirements clearly defined 
  • Load tested 

The product should exchange data with other systems (where required)

  • Application Programme Interfaces (API) that are relevant to the use case for the product, follow Government Digital Services Open API Best Practice, are documented and freely available and that third parties have reasonable access to connect 
  • If a product uses an NHS number to identify a patient record, it uses NHS Login 
  • If the product has the capability for read/write operations with electronic health records (EHRs) it uses industry standards for secure interoperability (e.g., OAuth 2.0, TLS 1.2) 
  • If wearable it complies with ISO/IEEE 11073 Personal Health Data (PHD) Standards) 

The product or service must be suitable for its intended use and meet the NHS Service Standards.

  • User need has been taken in account through user research, search data, analytics or other data to understand the problem 
  • The product solves a whole user problem, or it is clear to users how it fits into their pathway or journey 
  • User acceptance testing to validate usability of the product 
  • WCAG 2.2 level aa compliance 
  • Published accessibility statement 
  • Have a multi-disciplinary team 
  • Use agile ways of working 
  • Continually develop the product 
  • Benefit case includes objectives and metrics that can be tracked 
  • Product meets cloud first and / or internet first 
  • Common components and patterns are used 
  • Service level agreement 
  • Reporting on performance 
  • Have an uptime of 99.9% or above 

What is the evidence?  

  • Where appropriate (e.g if you are submitting an implementation project to generate evidence in real-world settings), please provide demonstration and evidence of clinical safety and efficacy through the appropriate studies, e.g., clinical trials.  
  • This may include a description of the size of sample evidence, which may include the number of patients/participants and sites involved in the generation of evidence. 
  • Whether Patient and Public Involvement and Engagement (PPIE) played a role in the development of the innovation and how PPIE contributed to any studies to gather evidence. 
  • If your product is at an idea generation stage, please state so.

Please provide a list of references cited throughout the application including the list of evidence on safety and efficacy (e.g., sensitivity, specificity, positive and negative predictive values (PPV and NPV respectively)) of the proposed solution (i.e., peer reviewed publications, conference proceedings, poster, reports, etc.) in Section 7 “Supporting Information”. 

Where does your innovation fit within the care pathway?

  • Please provide (as an attachment in Section 7) a schematic illustrating how your innovation will disrupt the clinical pathway and compare with standard practices. Please aim to include all steps in the pathway (triage/analysis etc.).  
  • Describe how your innovation would improve the proposed care pathway (e.g. better patient outcomes, reduced hospital admissions, length of hospital stay, workforce required, etc.) providing statistics/percentage of the improvement where available. 

What is the impact on the system?

This may include a description on how the innovation would impact health services, how the system will need to adapt (including people, process, and culture) in order to deliver system-wide benefits.  

4.3 Project plan and deliverables

Please provide a detailed description of the proposed project, clearly outlining the expected exit point of the project. The applicants are expected to provide the following information:

  • A breakdown of work packages, including PPIE, equity of access and net zero elements of the proposal.
  • Detail of what will be conducted within each of the work packages, the rationale behind these work packages, key measurable deliverables, and how these will be delivered.
  • Make sure you provide an appropriate level of detail for the proposed study design. This may include both quantitative and qualitative methodologies, power calculation, study cohort, the patient/service users affected.
  • Include steps needed to obtain relevant approvals, if applicable. 
  • A project Gantt chart to support the project breakdown must be provided as an attachment in Section 7. 
  • An outline of the key risks to the project and state how these will be mitigated against. 
  • If you are not planning to engage with patients, you MUST explain why.

FOR PROJECTS SUBMITTING AN IMPLEMENTATION STUDY IN REAL WORD SETTINGS: Projects focusing on submitting implementation plans in real-world settings are strongly recommended to conduct an independent (service) evaluation as part of the project (within the duration of the project). Projects without an independent evaluation partner must provide an evaluation strategy and detail the outcomes to be measured. It is important that your evaluation is robust and can undergo independent scrutiny. The aim of the evaluation is to understand how your innovation is implemented, what effects it has, for whom, how, and why. 

Please consider the following elements when designing a real-world evaluation study:  

  • The unmet need assessed by relative priority nationally or regionally, including assessment of potential health gain. 
  • The outcomes are strong enough to support scale and spread as expected. 
  • The proposed method of implementation is easy, credible and adaptable for spread, including technical and operational elements. 
  • Resources (finance/staff) are quantified and available across sufficient proportion of market. 
  • There is appropriate economic assessment (e.g., return on investment).  

Please include the following detail in your real-world evaluation strategy: 

  • Your overarching evaluation aims (e.g., health economics, health outcomes, enablers and barriers to implementation and delivery)  
  • The evaluation methods you propose to carry out (e.g., process, impact, economic)  
  • A logic model. Applicants must attach a schematic to illustrate this in Section 7 “Supporting information”.
  • Potential evaluation outcomes may include (this is not an exhaustive list):  
    • Clinical outcomes 
    • Time to and accuracy of diagnosis 
    • Outpatient appointments, including follow-up appointments 
    • Inpatient admissions, including bed-days, length of stay, and readmissions 
    • Ambulance calls 
    • Primary care appointments 
    • Medicines use 
    • Workforce capacity 
    • Releasing beds 
    • Quality of life 
    • Patient Experience 
    • Efficiencies 
    • Acceptability by patient and clinicians 
    • Costs, including procurement cost, associated costs, downstream cost, cost-saving, cost-releasing 
    • Sustainability and environmental impact 
  • Your proposed evaluation partner, or if not known, an outline of the plan and a realistic cost estimation should be provided. Furthermore, please describe your approach for appointing an independent evaluation partner.  

4.4 Milestones

Please list up to 10 key milestones for Phase 3 projects along with timings for completion. The number of milestones should be appropriate for the project, you do not need to use the maximum number.

The milestones should be comprehensive (including but not limited to technical, clinical, commercial activities, net zero, PPIE and equity of care, health economics/evaluation and impact and ethical/regulatory approvals) and the success criteria able to be assessed objectively (e.g. ‘all tests delivered to 99% accuracy’ or ‘for statistical significance, 2000 samples must be processed’) with an emphasis throughout on practicality as this initiative is seeking evidence that the technology is viable in the proposed setting and can be effectively deployed to, and adopted by, NHS trusts. Appropriate record keeping and reporting are essential, but reports are not in themselves the main goal of the project. Please indicate the roles that would contribute to the milestone under ‘Resource’.

4.5 Key competitors and unique selling point

Please provide details of any direct competitor or market alternatives, which should include the following:

  • The advantages of the proposed solution compared to the current standard of care.

  • How your proposed solution is innovative.

  • Details of any competing innovations or alternatives in the wider market (either on the market or in development) and description of the advantages and innovativeness of your proposed solution over these (i.e., what is your unique selling point).

  • If there are no competing innovations, please describe how your proposed solution compares to current standard of care.

  • Companies may wish to consider working with other companies to bring forward solutions that can make a real difference.

4.6 Intellectual property (IP)

The definition of Intellectual Property (IP) includes patents, trademarks, designs, copyright (such as new software, checklists, scales, protocols, questionnaires, toolkits, guidelines or similar), research tools (such as data analysis techniques, assays, cell lines, biomarkers, materials or equipment and devices) and (clinical) data.

Please provide details on the following:

  • Any relevant existing background IP that will be utilised during the project and the current ownership arrangements, including patents or patent applications.

  • Any foreground IP which will be produced or improved during the project and how this IP will be captured and managed. Also provide details regarding expected ownership of foreground IP.

  • Any Freedom to Operate (FTO) search that has been conducted to date. If no search has been conducted, please explain your rationale.

4.7 Commercialisation and NHS/Social Care implementation strategy

Please give an overview of your commercialisation and implementation strategies, and business plan for the product or service you are developing, including market launch and long-term adoption. Please include:

  • A review of the market size and expected penetration rate (Total Available Market, Serviceable Available Market, Serviceable Obtainable Market) for proposed innovation in the UK, NHS and beyond (EU, US, etc) including growth rate of the market.

  • Barriers to market entry.

  • An overview of your commercialisation and business plans, with consideration of who will use the solution, the likely cost of the solution and/or price strategy, and who will be the payer.

  • Your business model for local/regional/national NHS adoption, including implementation costs/implications, workforce requirements, etc.

  • If additional funding/investment is required to adopt the solution and if so, what are your plans to raise the required capital.

  • If applicable, what are the plans for manufacturing the product and its current scale of production. How easy it is to scale up and if there are any issues that need to be resolved in order to institute a reliable manufacturing process.

  • Stakeholder engagement plan to support end user/operational/clinical uptake/buy-in/roll out of the innovation.

  • The expected timescales for regional/national spread and the steps needed for adoption after the project.

  • Plans for long term sustainability of the technology.

  • How you will ensure that the innovation is affordable to the end users, NHS, and the wider system such as Integrated Care Systems (ICSs) both immediately and throughout the life of the product.

  • The evidence, both health economics and delivery of true impact, the NHS and wider system will require before the technology can be adopted.

  • What steps will be taken to ensure adoption of the innovation following the completion of the project.

4.8 Patient and public involvement and engagement (PPIE) and equity of access

NHS England are committed to giving patients and the public a voice. The SBRI Healthcare Programme has embraced this vision and has incorporated patient and public involvement and engagement (PPIE) in the scheme to ensure proposed innovations address the needs of patients and carers, as well as clinicians and health system leaders and users.  

Patient and Public Involvement and Engagement (PPIE) is an accepted and recommended working practice within healthcare research ensuring that solutions are co-produced with patients, meet patient needs, and to ensure there is an acceptability among end-users. Applicants are expected to develop a thorough PPIE strategy as part of their project. Please consider including the following information in this section:

  • What are your plans for PPIE? Please provide specific details such as the way you will be involving and engaging with the patients and the public, the frequency at which you will plan activities and the specific outputs.
  • How will the relevant patient groups be involved in the development of innovation roll out and NHS adoption strategy?
  • How will you ensure that the innovation will be acceptable to patients, their families, carers, the wider support network, and healthcare professionals?

For further information regarding PPIE, we strongly recommend applicants refer to the NIHR Guidance including guidance on reward and payment for involvement, as well as an evidence-based guide on how to involve and engage patients in digital health tech innovation.

The SBRI Healthcare Programme is committed to promoting equality, diversity and inclusion, and reducing health inequalities through the development of technologies and solutions it is funding.

Please provide the following detail in this section:

  • Whether the innovation might exacerbate health inequalities, which group(s) of the public/patients might be affected and how might you minimise this.

  • How the proposed innovation will ensure equity of access (e.g., underserved ethnicities, under-represented groups, economic groups, vulnerable groups, geography, digital exclusion, etc) along with the steps to understand and alleviate potential negative impacts. More information on what constitutes a health inequality can be found on The King’s Fund website.

  • Given the rural nature of many places, an over-reliance on home and community interventions needing to be permanently online should be considered (Wi-Fi and phone signals in rural locations may be weak or unreliable).

  • The cost of data use, which would negatively impact on accessibility by some low income or marginalised communities.

  • Please explain your assessment of local healthcare inequalities relative to the selected theme and the challenges facing your population, including which data sources have been used for inform this assessment and articulate the plans and objectives that are in place to deliver improvement against these challenges.

Health Innovation Kent Surrey Sussex (KSS) has developed a Health Equity Framework – 10 core principles to think about when designing or implementing an innovation. Applicants are invited to consult the document and ensure they consider health equity in all their decision making. The questions below should be used to anticipate, assess and prevent potential adverse inequities of proposed solutions to different population groups.

  1. PEOPLE – UNDERSERVED POPULATIONS  
    Which vulnerable or minority groups may be most affected by or concerned with this innovation? Outline the possible inequities for each group. Does the solution address root causes of inequity? If not, how could it?

  2. DATA – MEASURING AND DEFINING GAPS  
    What quantitative and qualitative evidence of inequality already exists in the area of interest? What evidence or data is missing or needed? Are there provisions to ensure ongoing data collection, reporting, and public accountability? What are the success indicators for the innovation? How will impact be documented and evaluated?

  3. CARE – CO-DESIGNING SOLUTIONS  
    Have stakeholders from different groups (especially those from under-served communities) been informed, meaningfully involved, and authentically represented in the development of this solution? Who’s missing and how can they be engaged? How will the level, diversity and quality of ongoing stakeholder engagement be assessed?

  4. CLINICAL – ENGAGING THE WORKFORCE IN EDI  
    What education or training may be required to improve cultural competency of staff? What workplace factors may be perpetuating health inequalities in the area of interest? How will this innovation reduce disparities or discrimination in clinical practice?

  5. DIGITAL – ENABLING DIGITAL INCLUSION  
    What adverse impacts or unintended consequences could result from a digital solution? Which vulnerable or minority groups could be negatively impacted by digital technology? How could adverse impacts of digital exclusion be prevented or minimised?

  6. FINANCE – REDUCING FINANCIAL BARRIERS  
    Is the innovation adequately funded to ensure successful implementation and evaluation? Which population groups are most disadvantaged financially by the area of interest? How will adverse financial impacts be prevented or minimised by the innovation to increase access?

  7. PLACE – INCLUSIVE ACCESS  
    Are there geographical health disparities relating to the area of interest? Has there been an assessment of the suitability of the service delivery environment? How will this innovation improve access and ensure an inclusive and accessible infrastructure?

  8. CLIMATE – CLIMATE IMPACT ON HEALTH  
    How will climate change impact the area of interest, and which minority groups will be most affected? Can this innovation minimise the social or geographical impacts of climate change? How will this innovation contribute to NetZero and promote climate change activism?

  9. POLICY – EQUITY IN DECISION-MAKING  
    Which population groups are currently most advantaged and most disadvantaged by the system? Does this innovation address systemic barriers to accessing care (current and historical)? If not, how could it? Is the innovation team diverse and inclusive?

  10. COMMUNICATION – INCLUSIVE MESSAGING  
    What does the innovation seek to accomplish and is this well communicated? How will stakeholders from different minority groups be empowered and engaged? What provisions could be changed or added to ensure positive impacts on equity and inclusion?

4.9 Net Zero

Applicants are required to ensure that proposed technologies/solutions are considering steps towards the carbon neutral strategy and objectives for the NHS.

  • Impact of the innovation on NHS care delivery

    • Please provide, in simple terms, the environmental impact that your innovation may have in the care pathway / care setting it is intending to operate in, including how it may contribute to reducing the NHS carbon emissions (as explained in the Delivering a net zero NHS report, pages 11 and 12). Please use the low carbon care STEPS guidance to help with your assessment of the impact of the innovation on the care pathway.

    • Have you quantified or estimated the carbon emissions associated with the implementation of your innovation? If yes, please provide some details about the net carbon impact and, if used, the methodology used to get these results. The low carbon care STEPS guidance can also be used to demonstrate impact and use proxies for carbon emissions.

  • Organisation commmitment
    Please provide an outline on how you are planning to align with the NHS Sustainable Supplier Roadmap and carbon reduction targets: 

    • Are you aware of the NHS Sustainable Supplier Roadmap, the Evergreen Framework for suppliers and the carbon reduction targets? Y/N, please specify. 
    • What are you currently doing and planning to do regarding your product(s) and at an organisation level, to fulfil the requirements set by the NHS supplier roadmap? How will you ensure you align with the supplier roadmap and how long do you think it will take for readiness to fulfil the requirements set by the NHS Supplier’s roadmap? 
  • As you plan to implement at scale in the NHS and grow, what measure will you take to control your emissions (considering manufacturing plan, supply chain, organisation growth, etc). 

Section 5 – Team

Please note that members of the project team and project partners will need to be ‘invited’ through the PMO RMS via email to participate as team members, after which they must confirm their participation. The same process applies with the clinical partners and sub-contractors. The application cannot be submitted without doing so.

Please note all RMS accounts must be approved to confirm participation. We advise that all team members register on the RMS portal at least 7 days in advance of the competition deadline in order to have your account approved on time.

Firstly, please ensure the team member(s), sub-contractor(s) and clinical partner(s) are registered onto the RMS portal. Once their account is registered and approved, the lead applicant will be able to search and ‘invite’ the team member(s), sub-contractor(s) and clinical partner(s) to the application.

Please ensure that those invited to collaborate on this application confirm their involvement in good time, as the application cannot be submitted without this.

The role and time commitment of team members, advisors and sub-contractors should be included.

Please note that for applications to be considered, all fields within this section must be completed fully and to a satisfactory level. This includes complete descriptions of team members, sub-contractors, advisors, clinical/HCP partners, their experience, their roles in the project, Full Time Equivalent (FTE) commitments (if applicable) and costs.

5.1 Team member roles and % FTE commitment

Please add details of all team members and their role in the project. A maximum of 10 team members can be added. Do not include sub-contractors in this section.

Team members are those that belong to the host organisation with responsibility for the day-to-day management and delivery of the project. Those outside of the host organisation should be listed as sub-contractors or advisors.

Members of the project team will need to be registered and approved on the RMS portal before they can be added to an application. After being added to the application, they will first be ‘invited’ by the RMS to participate as a team member; if they accept, they will receive a further email to confirm their participation. The same process applies with the clinical partners and sub-contractor.

Please note that the application will not submit unless all team members added have confirmed their participation.

Please provide a job title, detailed description of the role performed in the project, time allocated to the project and relevant experience and skills. Time allocated to the project should ideally be expressed as an FTE percentage (the time allocated during the period of the project indicated as a proportion of the working hours for a Full Time Equivalent position).

Relevant commercial and management expertise of team members should be included.

5.2 Sub-contractor and advisor roles and % FTE commitment

Sub-contractors and advisors are individuals that do not belong to the host organisation and will provide a fee for service (or in-kind contribution); clinical partners should be listed in clinical/HCP partners' section.

Please provide the details of any sub-contractors or advisors involved in your application. A maximum of 10 sub-contractors/advisors can be added. Please provide a job title, detailed description of the role performed in the project, time allocated to the project and relevant experience and skills of the sub-contractor(s) or advisor(s).

The use of sub-contractors is optional; however, where your proposal involves sub-contracted individuals or companies, or benefits from the input of named expert advisors, details should be provided.

While quotes for activities can be in the form of forecasts in this application, you will be asked to provide formal quotes as part of the due diligence process if you are successful. If an advisor provides services at no cost or at a level of expenses incurred only, this detail should be indicated.

5.3 Clinical/healthcare professional (HCP) partner roles and % FTE commitment

Clinical/HCP partners are individuals that do not belong to the host organisation and will provide a fee for service (or in-kind contribution) in relation to the clinical elements of the project.

Please provide the organisation name, clinician/HCP’s job title, a detailed description of the role performed in the project, time allocated to the project and relevant experience and skills of the clinical/HCP partner(s).

The use of a clinical/HCP partner is not mandatory, but it is strongly recommended. A maximum of 10 clinical/HCP partners can be added.

5.4 Other Posts (max 300 words)

Please provide a detailed description of any other posts that are yet to be confirmed or appointed for the project. Please also provide the job title, a detailed description of the role performed in the project, time allocated to the project and relevant experience and skills that are required for the role.

Section 6: Application Finances

6.1 Application Finances

Please note that SBRI Healthcare is not a grant and not VAT exempt. If you are successful, you will be awarded a Development Agreement which is subject to VAT. All project costs should be indicated as NET cost incurred and a VAT charge at 20% may be applied. Please note the maximum cost a proposed project can request is detailed in the Competition Brief and the associated Invitation to Tender.

Full economic cost calculations are not relevant in this context. SBRI is a competitive procurement mechanism, and tenders are submitted by a variety of organisations. Whatever calculation you use to arrive at your tender price, your application is assessed against bids from other organisations. The assessors will also judge whether it reflects a fair market value. You are entitled to include overheads but remember that this is a competitive tender. You should bear this in mind when calculating your tender price.

Please provide a line-by-line summary of the costs of the project in the table supplemented. The costs quoted must reflect actual costs at a “fair market value” and profit should not be included.

All costs are eligible except for pure marketing costs (such as LinkedIn Premium, website development, marketing brochures), costs to support basic research, development of research hypotheses, and experimental designs that have no practical commercial application.

Please note that when indicating costs, the NET costs should be provided in the respective rows of the table supplemented. Please see some general guidance here.

  • Labour costs (for all those contributing to the project)

  • Material costs (including consumables specific to the project)

  • Capital equipment costs

  • Sub-contract costs

  • Travel and subsistence costs

  • Indirect costs

  • Other costs specifically attributed to the project

  • Total NET costs (auto populated)

Please confirm if you will be claiming VAT at 20% (please tick yes if you will apply VAT to the total costs). Please note VAT is the responsibility of the invoicing organisation.

6.2 Justification (max 500 words)

Please provide a justification of the costs, or staff involved, and quotes from sub-contractors where applicable. If there is significant use of sub-contractors, please explain how these will be used and the costs of each. Please note the Assessors are required to judge the application finances in terms of value for money, evaluating whether the proposed cost for effort and deliverables in a proposal reflect a fair market price. Applicants are strongly encouraged to consider the guidance provided in the Cost breakdown section below and summarise the elements in the application justification section.

Itemisation of costs and methods of calculation may be requested at a later date to support the application.

Cost breakdown

Please download, complete and finally attach the Finance spreadsheet with the details of all your costs following the different costs categories:

  • START – AWARD DETAILS

  • Labour costs

  • Material costs

  • Capital equipment costs

  • Sub-contract costs

  • Travel and subsistence costs

  • Indirect costs

  • Other costs

Please note that for the application to be considered, a complete breakdown of the requested budget using the template provided is required. Budget provided in other formats will not be accepted. The funding requested in the spreadsheet must be aligned with the application form.

Please consider the following when completing the spreadsheet:

Labour costs

  • In the Labour costs section, please provide details of posts and salaries of team members. This includes name, role, grade (put N/A if not relevant), annual salary and on-costs (cost incurred by the organisation to employ someone), %FTE dedicated to the project and the total number of months on the project (1-12). Please also include details about staff that are to be recruited and justify staff positions in the ‘Justification of Costs’ section at the bottom of the sheet and ensure the posts/figures entered are in line with those entered in the application form.

  • Full economic cost (FEC) calculations are not relevant in this context. SBRI is a competitive procurement mechanism, and tenders are submitted by a variety of organisations. Whatever calculations are used to arrive at the tender price, each application is assessed against bids from other organisations. Applicants should bear this in mind when calculating their tender price. Costs should reflect fair market value.  

  • Review salary costs and challenge salaries that seem too high in comparison to what is “market fair rate”.

  • Excessive time commitment for specific salaried staff.

  • High number of salaried staff for size of project.

  • Too few staff contracted for size of project or no salaried staff at host organisation. 

Materials

  • Please provide details of the consumables required for the project and justify the costs wherever possible, particularly for larger consumables items.

  • Please ensure that granularity is provided on material and consumables.

  • If a license for an app/service is listed, it is expected that it is at cost and no profit is charged.

Capital equipment

  • Capital expenditure should be clearly justified in relation to the project and the cost should be taken into account for the duration of the project.

  • Leasing equipment from a provider or borrowing from existing facilities is an option to consider.

  • Any equipment over the value of £250 should be itemised. Anything under can be grouped.

  • All equipment should be clearly justified at the bottom of the spreadsheet.

Sub-contract

  • Outline the hourly/daily rate for each provider including consultancy, sub-contractors, IP and legal. Here we also expect to see costs associated with net zero activities.

  • If successful, quotes from individual sub-contractors will be requested prior to contracting.

Travel and subsistence

  • Please include project-related travel costs using the most economic means possible. Please note that meals & accommodation are acceptable.

  • Remember to add details to justify the costs (number of visits, travel required, subsistence associated to a specific meeting, etc.) and provide details of conferences and the number of people attending (If applicable).

Indirect costs

  • Indirect costs may include estate costs (e.g., building and premises costs), services/utilities, rent or lease, insurance, etc.

  • Other indirect costs may include other departmental costs (for example Finance & HR).

  • Overhead costs should be charged in proportion to the amount of effort deployed on the project and should be calculated using own cost rates. Costs that are considered unreasonable could be rejected.

Other costs

  • This may include all other cost items which do not fit elsewhere, such as any dissemination costs related to publication or dissemination of findings. Please note that services outside England are acceptable but should be clearly justified in the justification section.

  • Here we expect to see payment for PPIE time (rates should be provided to justify the costs), PPIE travel fees, accommodation and subsistence where applicable, support costs if required and training.

Section 7: Supporting Information

Section 7: Supporting Information

Please submit the following supporting documents with your application form.

  • 3 minute video pitch in MP4 format at a maximum file size of 40MB to support your application.
  • We do not expect professionally produced videos (you can use your smartphone), however, please ensure the visual and audio are of good quality. Please ensure that your video submission is not longer than 3 minutes, as it will otherwise be truncated at exactly 3 minutes and only the first 3 minutes will be available to reviewers (mandatory for all). Please upload the video to the Dropbox folder provided in the application form, ensuring the lead applicant and host organisation name is in the file name.
  • Finance spreadsheet (mandatory for all)
  • Gantt chart (1 single side A4, mandatory for all)
  • Care pathway (1 single side A4, mandatory for all)
  • Regulatory approval document/clinical evidence to support innovation (up to 5 pages A4 – as required for stage of development, mandatory for real-world implementation studies)
  • Logic model (up to 2 single sides A4, mandatory for real-world implementation studies)
  • Additional supporting documents (5 single sides A4, optional)

Additional support documents may include a flow diagram illustrating the study design and the flow of participants, diagrams, pictures etc. If submitting a flow diagram, applicants should also describe complex interventions and controls as accurately and fully as possible within their diagram.

NOTE: Uploads MUST be provided as a Word or PDF document or you may not be able to submit your application or it may be difficult for the reviewers to view the required information in order to assess your application.

Excessive attachments may lead to your application being excluded from the assessment process.

Section 8: Administrative Contact Details

Please provide the details of an administrative lead as a secondary point of contact for any queries relating to this application.

Section 9: Validation Summary

Section 9: Validation Summary

Please follow the steps on the screen in order to validate and submit your application.

All mandatory fields should be completed, within the word limit, and team members invited must validate and approve their participation.

Please check your application's formatting by printing to view the PDF format before submitting. Pay special attention to images and tables, making adjustments to the online form as needed to ensure clarity and correct alignment.

Once submitted, the completed application can be viewed or downloaded from the RMS Portal. However, you will no longer have the ability to edit the application.

Please visit the SBRI Healthcare competition pages for details on the application deadlines. Only those applications received before the competition deadline will be accepted. PLEASE DO NOT SEND COMPLETED APPLICATIONS BY POST OR BY ANY OTHER MEANS OTHER THAN THROUGH THE RMS PORTAL.

For more information please see www.sbrihealthcare.co.uk. Questions on the challenges and scope of this SBRI Healthcare competition should be addressed to the Programme Management Office via email to sbri@lgcgroup.com.

Support to Applicants

Please find links to available support below, if applicable for your innovation/project:

InSites Programme - help with finding NHS collaboration sites among the NHS InSites peer network.

Secure Data Environment (SDE)- Projects seeking to use linked research datasets to better understand the local population’s health and care needs may wish to consult their emerging sub-regional secure data environment. This may provide opportunities to leverage access to data that aligns to local data infrastructure.

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