The Greater Manchester Academic Health Science Network main aim is to improve population health and create opportunity for wealth and employment through building on our assets and adopting effective method for reliable implementation of agreed best practice. Read more »
The Academic Health Science Network for Yorkshire and the Humber will create and harness a strong, purposeful partnership between patients, health services, industry, and academia to achieve a significant measureable improvement in the health and wealth of the population. Read more »
The North East and North Cumbria Academic Health Science Network is committed to improving both the health and economic prosperity of its region through innovation, research and dissemination of knowledge. Read more »
The Network works across four large, established biomedical and clinical communities, to drive sustainable improvements, through partners with a track record of excellence in research, teaching and education, health services and industry. Read more »
East Midlands Academic Health Science Network is a systematic delivery mechanism for innovation, enabling all National Health Service and Higher Education Institutions industry and other partners to engage in research and innovation from its inception, and translate their expertise once that research and innovation is ready for implementation. Read more »
The Oxford Academic Health Science Network enables partners to come together with commissioning bodies, patients and the public to form a community to participate in providing evidence based best care for our patients and population, to innovate and in so doing, to deliver new opportunities to create wealth. Read more »
The Health Innovation Network (HIN) South London, the Academic Health Science Network for South London, is a partnership that connects academics, NHS commissioners and providers, local authorities, patients and patient groups, and industry in order to accelerate the spread and adoption of innovations and best practice, using evidence-based research across large populations. Read more »