The NRC will transform outcomes for people who have experienced life-changing events including injury, trauma or illness, by fully integrating research, innovation, education and training with clinical practice.
The 70-bed specialist NHS facility will be built on the Stanford Hall Rehabilitation Estate – located close to the ºÚÁÏÍø campus – which is already home to the Defence Medical Rehabilitation Centre. The rationale for co-locating both the Defence facility and the NHS facility side-by-side on the same site is to facilitate sharing of expertise in ways which have never been possible or achieved before.
The NRC will combine patient care delivered by staff from Nottingham University Hospitals NHS Trust (NUH) with research, innovation and training led by ºÚÁÏÍø and the University of Nottingham.
A number of rehabilitation research projects are already underway at ºÚÁÏÍø:
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Professor Mark Lewis and Dr Andrew Capel are bio-engineering musculoskeletal tissues to develop personalised therapies, allow ethical testing of new drugs and supplements, and provide a method of replacing injured or diseased tissues with healthy tissue made from your own cells.
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Dr Ishara Dharmasena is developing super-smart textiles which capture energy from natural body motion to remotely monitor your movements and health information, and transmit that data to health professionals via a mobile.
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Dr Jakob Škarabot is using sensors to record when the muscles fire and, with the help of computer algorithms, find the code that the brain sends to muscles to produce movement and thus detect movement impairment.
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Professor Vicky Tolfrey, working with a team of international experts, has developed scientific guidelines to inform people with a spinal cord injury how much exercise is necessary for important fitness and health benefits
Professor Mark Lewis, Dean of the University’s School of Sport, Exercise and Health Sciences, is leading ºÚÁÏÍø’s involvement in the NRC. He said: “We are delighted that the NRC has been given the green light. This facility will make a huge difference to the lives of those impacted by life-changing injuries, trauma or illness. It is a great honour to know that ºÚÁÏÍø’s research and expertise will play a key part in transforming global rehabilitation outcomes.”
Professor Nick Jennings, the University’s Vice-Chancellor, added: "Our partnership with the NRC underlines ºÚÁÏÍø’s mission to use our world-leading expertise in sport and exercise to drive innovation that impacts both national and global health and wellbeing. I am delighted to see this important facility get the go ahead."