
Nottingham Uni Hospitals NHS Trust
Nottingham Uni Hospitals NHS Trust
10 Projects, page 1 of 2
assignment_turned_in Project2022 - 2025Partners:CHEATA Ctr Healthcare Equip & Tech Adopt, Renfrew Group, Society for Research in Rehabilitation, Steeper Group, Footfalls & Heartbeats (UK) Ltd +28 partnersCHEATA Ctr Healthcare Equip & Tech Adopt,Renfrew Group,Society for Research in Rehabilitation,Steeper Group,Footfalls & Heartbeats (UK) Ltd,Medicines & Healthcare pdts Reg Acy MHRA,Medilink Midlands,Renfrew Group,NTU,National Inst. Health & Care Research,University of Nottingham,Medilink Midlands,BlueSkeye AI LTD,Nottingham Uni Hospitals NHS Trust,Steeper Group,EMAHSN East Midlands Academic Heath,Society for Research in Rehabilitation,Stroke Association,Nottingham Uni Hospitals NHS Trust,MHRA Medicines & Health Care Products Re,CHEATA Ctr Healthcare Equip & Tech Adopt,National Institute for Health Research,BlueSkeye AI LTD,Stroke Association,EMAHSN East Midlands Academic Heath,Asthma UK,DNRC (Defence and National Rehab Centre),Footfalls & Heartbeats (UK) Ltd,Medical Technologies Innovation Facility,Asthma and Lung UK,Medical Technologies Innovation Facility,NIHR,DNRC (Defence and National Rehab Centre)Funder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: EP/W000679/1Funder Contribution: 831,040 GBPThis network will focus on developing the next generation of advanced technologies for rehabilitation, targeting musculoskeletal, cardiorespiratory, neurological and mental health conditions. It will be connected to the new £70 million National Rehabilitation Centre (NRC), a major national investment in patient care, innovation and technology, due to open to patients in 2024. The NRC is being co-located with the specialist £300m+ Defence Medical Rehabilitation Centre on the Stamford Hall Rehabilitation Estate so that the two centres can benefit from the sharing of a wealth of knowledge, expertise and facilities. This EPSRC networkplus is therefore an exceptionally timely opportunity to capitalise on this significant investment, actively involving the UK Engineering & Physical Science community in this initiative and embedding technology innovation at the earliest stage. Advances in medicine have resulted in a significant increase in survival rates from trauma and injury, disorders and disease (acute and chronic). However, survival is often just the start, and the higher rates have led to an increase in rehabilitation needs, involving many patients with complex conditions. Technology has an increasingly important part to play in rehabilitation, to support a limited number of skilled healthcare professionals, reduce hospital stays, improve engagement with rehabilitation programmes, increase independence and improve outcomes. Speeding up recovery and helping patients get back to work and life has considerable personal, social and economic impact. This network will bring together researchers, healthcare providers, patient & user groups, industrial partners and supporting organisations (e.g. policy makers, charities) to develop a world-class research community and infrastructure for advanced rehabilitation technologies. By connecting new innovative technologies and advanced materials with our growing understanding of mental and physical health, this network will support the provision of novel, transformative, affordable solutions that will address current issues, allowing patients to lead more independent and fulfilling lives and reducing the burden on limited NHS resources. Supported by a core membership of experts from the rehabilitation field, this network aims to introduce researchers who are not typically involved in rehabilitation technology research into a network of rehabilitation experts. Central to the grant will be a series of Grand Challenge Blended Workshops and supported conversations designed to identify critical areas for research, with funding for feasibility projects to build those collaborations and drive forward innovation. The network will explore multimodal approaches that target both physical and mental rehabilitation. Technology innovation will focus around three key areas: 1) advanced functional materials, 2) patient-specific devices & therapy, and 3) closed loop measurement and rehabilitation.
more_vert assignment_turned_in Project2014 - 2020Partners:University of Nottingham, NTU, Nottingham Uni Hospitals NHS Trust, ANDOR TECHNOLOGY LIMITED, Andor Technology Ltd +7 partnersUniversity of Nottingham,NTU,Nottingham Uni Hospitals NHS Trust,ANDOR TECHNOLOGY LIMITED,Andor Technology Ltd,RiverD International,Oxford Instruments Group (UK),BC,University of Glasgow,RiverD International,Nottingham Uni Hospitals NHS Trust,University of GlasgowFunder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: EP/L025620/1Funder Contribution: 1,394,760 GBPOne in three people in the UK population will develop cancer during their life time. The incidence of cancer continues to increase world-wide and healthcare providers are facing increasing challenges in the management of this expanding group of patients. However, new imaging technologies allow detection of tumours at earlier stages and now more cancer patients than ever can be successfully treated by surgery. Tissue conserving surgery is an advanced surgical procedure that tries to only remove cancerous tissue and leave healthy tissue in place. In skin conserving surgery (also known as Mohs micrographic surgery), one layer after another of tissue is cut away and examined under the microscope to make sure that all the cancer is out. This process is stopped when only healthy tissue is left. Successful removal of all cancer cells is the key to achieving lower rates of the cancer returning. There is always a balance to be struck between making sure that all the cancer is removed and preserving as much healthy tissue as possible in order to reduce scarring and disfigurement. The real challenge however is to know where the cancer starts and ends when looking at it during an operation so that the surgeon knows when to stop cutting. Although Mohs surgery provides the highest cure rates for basal cell carcinoma, the most common type of cancer in humans with ~60,000 new patients each year in the UK, it takes around 1-2 hours per layer to prepare and diagnose under the microscope. The high costs and the need for highly specialized surgeons, has limited the availability of Mohs surgery in the UK and led to "post-code" treatment variability. Compared to Mohs surgery, breast conserving surgery (more than 10,000 procedures per year) is considerably more complex and for practical reasons, the traditional methods of diagnosis by preparing thin tissue specimens cannot be performed during surgery. As a consequence, in England more than 2,000 patients per year require a second operation, usually complete removal of the breast. Recently, my research group has developed a new method to diagnose cancer cells in tissue layers removed during surgery. The main advantage of this technique is that the time consuming steps of tissue fixation, staining, and sectioning are eliminated. This new diagnosis method uses a combination of two techniques called auto-fluorescence imaging and Raman scattering, that can measure the molecular composition of tissue and provide objective diagnosis of cancer. However, this breakthrough is just the beginning and further work is required to take these successes forward and improve patient care. In the short and medium term, I will focus on reducing the diagnosis time for skin cancers to only a few minutes by developing a method to measure Raman spectra from eighteen regions of the tissue simultaneously. In collaboration with cancer surgeons, we will expand this new technology to diagnosis of other cancers, such as breast and lung. This will be achieved by optimizing the auto-fluorescence imaging and Raman scattering to take into consideration the chemical make up of these tissues. In the longer term, I plan to develop novel hand-held medical devices based on multimodal spectral imaging that could be used by the surgeons to diagnose the tissues directly on the body and remove tissue only if cancerous cells are detected. These methods for tumour diagnosis can revolutionise the surgical treatment of cancers, by providing a fast and objective way for surgeons to make sure that all cancer cells have been removed whilst at the same time preserving as much healthy tissue as possible. To achieve these ambitious objectives I will work in close partnership with other scientists, engineers, doctors, surgeons and industry. Such collaborations will ensure that cutting-edge science and engineering is exploited to develop leading healthcare technologies for the benefit of patients.
more_vert assignment_turned_in Project2006 - 2011Partners:Mace Ltd, Xaar Americas Inc, TATA Motors Engineering Technical Centre, 3T RPD Ltd, Olivetti I-Jet +376 partnersOnly 199 Partners of A Centre for Innovative Manufacturing and Construction are shown here.Mace Ltd,Xaar Americas Inc,TATA Motors Engineering Technical Centre,3T RPD Ltd,Olivetti I-Jet,SODA Project,Krause Automation,Motor Insurance Repair Research Centre,Ricardo UK,3D Systems Inc,Rolls-Royce Plc (UK),Hapold Consulting Ltd,Tesco,Bafbox Ltd,NCAR,Charnwood Borough Council,ArvinMeritor Automotive Light Vehicle,Autoliv Ltd,StubbsRich Ltd,Rim-Cast,SIEMENS PLC,CMP Batteries Ltd,Rozone Limited,Jaguar Cars,ManuBuild,Bafbox Ltd,National Physical Laboratory NPL,IPLON GMBH - THE INFRANET COMPANY,BT Group Property,Inst for Surface and Boundary Layers,Charnwood Borough Council,SODA Project,Boeing Co,Marylebone Cricket Club,AMEC,Huntleigh Healthcare Ltd,Delcam International plc,Terraplana,UK Sport,ITESM,Georgia Institute of Technology,Head Sport AG,TRW Conekt,Marden Edwards Ltd,Steel Construction Institute,Autoliv Ltd,Mouchel Parkman,EMDA,InfoVision Systems Ltd.,Ontology Works Inc,Exide Technologies,Collins and Aikman Ltd,Leicester Glenfield Hospital,Rozone Limited,Textile Recycling Association,BPB plc,John Laing Plc,Development Securities Plc,Giddings and Lewis INC,Collins and Aikman Ltd,Licensing Executive Society Intl LESI,TNO Industrial Technology,Schneider Electric (Germany),Laser Optical Engineering Ltd,Scott Wilson Ltd,Wates Construction,Fully Distributed Systems (United Kingdom),TRW Conekt,ThyssenKrupp Krause GmbH,BRE Group (Building Res Establishment),GlaxoSmithKline (Harlow),3T Additive Manufacturing Ltd,Hopkinson Computing Ltd,Econolyst Ltd,Lend Lease,Marylebone Cricket Club,Aptiv (United Kingdom),TNO Industrial Technology,Toyota Motor Europe,NPL,Novel Technical Solutions,BAE Systems,Leicestershire County Cricket Club,FORD MOTOR COMPANY LIMITED,Motor Industry Research Assoc. (MIRA),BT Group Property,Shepherd Construction Ltd,Capita,GSK,Bae Systems Defence Ltd,Cross-Hueller Ltd,CWV Group Ltd,In2Connect Ltd,Engage GKN,Datalink Electronics,Penn State University College of Medicin,Goodrich Actuation Systems,Siemens PLMS Ltd,Dept for Env Food & Rural Affairs DEFRA,LOE,Lawrence M Barry & Co,Birmingham City Council,Nike,The European Recycling Company,British Gypsum Ltd,Arup Group,John Laing Plc,Siemens Transportation,Boeing Co,Lenze UK Ltd.,Renishaw plc (UK),North West Aerospace Alliance,STI,Ove Arup & Partners Ltd,Regentec Limited,Let's Face It,Huntsman Advanced Materials UK Ltd,National Centre for Atmospheric Research,The European Recycling Company,Capita Symonds,Delphi Diesel Systems Ltd,B H R Group Ltd,Mace Ltd,Buro Happold,Leicestershire County Cricket Club,Pentland Group plc,Rover Group Ltd,ArvinMeritor Automotive Light Vehicle,CSC (UK) Ltd,GlaxoSmithKline PLC,AMEC,BT Group,Capita Symonds,Fergusons Irish Linen & Co.Ltd,Diameter Ltd,Clarks,Edwards,Invotec Group LTD,3D Systems Inc,CSC (UK) Ltd,Ordnance Survey,Z Corporation,In2Connect Ltd,Lamb Technicon UK,TAP Biosystems,Shotcrete,Schneider Electric (France),Reid Architecture,Engage GKN,Beta Technology Limited,adidas-Salomon AG,Bosch Rexroth Corporation,InfoVision Systems Ltd.,MG Rover Group Ltd,Singapore Institute of Mfg Technology,Huntsman (United Kingdom),Qioptiq Ltd,RENISHAW,Clarks,Simons Design,World Taekwondo Federation,CIRIA,Penn State University,Sulzer Chemtech (UK) Ltd,GAS-UK,Loughborough University,PIRA,Clamonta Ltd,Laser Optical Engineering,Real-Time Innovations,Bovis Lend Lease,Helm X,NTU,Emergent Systems,TRA,Parker Hannifin Plc,Faber Maunsell,Dunlop Slazenger,Rojac Patterns Ltd,DEGW,Delphi Diesel Systems,Toyota Motor Europe NV SA,Rim-Cast,Buildoffsite,Reid Architecture,Rexroth Bosch Group,GE Aviation,Schneider Electric GmbH,S M M T,Putzmeister UK,AECOM,Mott Macdonald (United Kingdom),Ford Motor Company,Smithers Pira,BIRMINGHAM CITY COUNCIL,SCI,Ontology Works Inc,Monterrey Institute of Technology,SMRE,URS/Scott Wilson,Coventry University,Zytek Group Ltd,Webster Components Ltd,Interserve Project Services Ltd,Mott Macdonald UK Ltd,University of Nottingham,East Midlands Development Agency,ThyssenKrupp Krause GmbH,VTT ,Krause Automation,Datalink Electronics,TME,RTI,National Cricket Centre,The DEWJOC Partnership,MCP Equipment,Ford Motor Company,Sulzer Chemtech (UK) Ltd,VTT Technical Research Centre of Finland,Econolyst Ltd,BAE Systems (Sweden),Solidica Corp,Delcam International plc,Putzmeister UK,Lawrence M Barry & Co,Knibb Gormezano & Partners,Nottingham University Hospitals Charity,Fergusons Irish Linen & Co.Ltd,adidas Group (International),Nike,British Telecom,OS,National Ctr for Atmospheric Res (NCAR),Pentland Group plc,MCP Equipment,National Cricket Centre,Hopkinson Computing Ltd,Z Corporation,Interserve Project Services Ltd,Tesco,Critical Pharmaceuticals,Terrapin Ltd,TAP Biosystems,Simons Design,Rolls-Royce (United Kingdom),Delcam (United Kingdom),Mechan Ltd,World Taekwondo Federation,New Balance Athletic Shoes,Fraunhofer -Institut für Grenzflächen-,JAGUAR LAND ROVER LIMITED,Xaar Americas Inc,CIRIA,EMCBE and CE,Zytek Group Ltd,RFE International Ltd,JCB Research Ltd,EOS,Dunlop Slazenger,Saint-Gobain Weber Ltd,MIRA Ltd,Invotec Circuits,Parker Hannifin Plc,Environment Agency,Aptiv (Ireland),Prior 2 Lever,UK Sport,Nottingham Uni Hospitals NHS Trust,CWV Group Ltd,BAE Systems (United Kingdom),Building Research Establishment (BRE),Exide Technologies (United Kingdom),Highbury Ltd,CRITICAL PHARMACEUTICALS,Novel Technical Solutions,Giddings and Lewis INC,Lenze UK Ltd.,University Hospitals of Leicester NHS Trust,Soletec Ltd,SAIC,CSW Group,JCB Research Ltd (to be replaced),M I Engineering Ltd,USC,AMTRI,Health and Safety Executive (HSE),Surface Technology International Ltd,EMCBE and CE,Singapore Institute of Manufacturing Tec,Buro Happold Limited,HEAD Sport GmbH,University of Southern California,URS Corporation (United Kingdom),Buildoffsite,Mechan Ltd,Smmt Industry Forum,Fully Distributed Systems Ltd,Clamonta Ltd,Rojac Patterns Ltd,Arup Group Ltd,AMTRI,Mowlem Plc,Smmt Industry Forum,StubbsRich Ltd,Solidica Corp,DEGW,TLON GmbH - The Infranet Company,BT Group,Boeing (International),DEFRA Environment Agency,British Gypsum Ltd,Beta Technology Ltd,Birmingham City Council,Edwards,Rohm and Haas Electronic Materials Ltd,Mouchel Parkman,Siemens Transportation,Mouchel Group,Terrapin Ltd,Terraplana,Nottingham University Hospitals Trust,London Borough of Bromley Council,Galorath Affiliates Ltd,VTT Technical Research Centre of Finland,Galorath Affiliates Ltd,Mowlem Plc,Coventry University,Health and Safety Executive,Huntsman Advanced Materials UK Ltd,Huntleigh Healthcare Ltd,Development Securities Plc,PSU,Prior 2 Lever,Henkel Loctite Adhesives Ltd,Locate Bio (United Kingdom),Shepherd Construction Ltd,Motor Insurance Repair Research Centre,TRW Automotive Technical Centre,Faber Maunsell,SAIC,Webster Components Ltd,Loughborough University,CSW Group,Saint-Gobain Weber Ltd,ME Engineering Ltd,Helm X,New Balance Athletic Shoes,Jaguar Cars,S M M T,Henkel Loctite Adhesives Ltd,The DEWJOC Partnership,London Borough of Camden,RFE International Ltd,GT,Emergent Systems,North West Aerospace Alliance,GE (General Electric Company) UK,Lamb Technicon UK,Hapold Consulting Ltd,Next Plc,Olivetti I-Jet SpA,L S C Group Ltd,ManuBuild,BPB plc,Knibb Gormezano & Partners,QinetiQ,Bosch Rexroth Corporation,Next Plc,SIT,Manchester City Football Club,TRW Automotive Technical Centre,MIRA LTD,Rohm and Haas Electronic Materials Ltd,École Centrale de Lille,Cross-Hueller Ltd,Rolls-Royce (United Kingdom),Let's Face It,Manchester City Football Club,EOS GmbH - Electro Optical Systems,Shotcrete,SOLARTECH LTDFunder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: EP/E002323/1Funder Contribution: 17,848,800 GBPThe Innovative Manufacturing and Construction Research Centre (IMCRC) will undertake a wide variety of work in the Manufacturing, Construction and product design areas. The work will be contained within 5 programmes:1. Transforming Organisations / Providing individuals, organisations, sectors and regions with the dynamic and innovative capability to thrive in a complex and uncertain future2. High Value Assets / Delivering tools, techniques and designs to maximise the through-life value of high capital cost, long life physical assets3. Healthy & Secure Future / Meeting the growing need for products & environments that promote health, safety and security4. Next Generation Technologies / The future materials, processes, production and information systems to deliver products to the customer5. Customised Products / The design and optimisation techniques to deliver customer specific products.Academics within the Loughborough IMCRC have an internationally leading track record in these areas and a history of strong collaborations to gear IMCRC capabilities with the complementary strengths of external groups.Innovative activities are increasingly distributed across the value chain. The impressive scope of the IMCRC helps us mirror this industrial reality, and enhances knowledge transfer. This advantage of the size and diversity of activities within the IMCRC compared with other smaller UK centres gives the Loughborough IMCRC a leading role in this technology and value chain integration area. Loughborough IMCRC as by far the biggest IMRC (in terms of number of academics, researchers and in funding) can take a more holistic approach and has the skills to generate, identify and integrate expertise from elsewhere as required. Therefore, a large proportion of the Centre funding (approximately 50%) will be allocated to Integration projects or Grand Challenges that cover a spectrum of expertise.The Centre covers a wide range of activities from Concept to Creation.The activities of the Centre will take place in collaboration with the world's best researchers in the UK and abroad. The academics within the Centre will be organised into 3 Research Units so that they can be co-ordinated effectively and can cooperate on Programmes.
more_vert assignment_turned_in Project2022 - 2027Partners:Xaar Americas Inc, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, CPI, Syngenta, UD +35 partnersXaar Americas Inc,Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory,CPI,Syngenta,UD,Nottingham Uni Hospitals NHS Trust,Henry Royce Institute,GSK (UK),Nottingham Uni Hospitals NHS Trust,University of Nottingham,JOHNSON MATTHEY PLC,GSK (UK),Johnson Matthey plc,Xaar Plc,XAAR PLC,PARC,Formlabs inc,JM,ETH Zurich,Pfizer Global R and D,CSIRO,Astra Pharmaceuticals Canada,NTU,University of Delaware,Centre for Process Innovation CPI (UK),EPFZ,Pfizer Global R and D,Velcro,Syngenta,CPI Ltd,University of Delaware,CSIRO,AstraZeneca (Global),Pfizer (United Kingdom),LBNL,PARC,Formlabs inc,Boston Micro Fabrication,Velcro,Henry Royce InstituteFunder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: EP/W017032/1Funder Contribution: 5,865,540 GBP3D Printing elicits tremendous excitement from a broad variety of industry - it offers flexible, personalised and on demand scalable manufacture, affording the opportunity to create new products with geometrical / compositional freedoms and advanced functions that are not possible with traditional manufacturing practices. 3D Printing progresses rapidly: for polymerics, we have seen significant advances in our ability to be able to manufacture highly functional structures with high resolution projection through developments in projection micro stereolithography, multimaterial ink jet printing and two photon polymerisation. There have also been exciting advances in volumetric 3DP with the emergence of Computational Axial Lithography and more recent work such as 'xolo'. Alongside these advances there has also been developments in materials, e.g., in the emergence of '4D printing' using responsive polymers and machine learning / AI on 3DP is beginning to be incorporated into our understanding. The impact of these advances is significant, but 3D printing technology is reaching a tipping point where the multiple streams of effort (materials, design, process, product) must be brought together to overcome the barriers that prevent mass take up by industry, i.e., materials produced can often have poor performance and it is challenging to match them to specific processes, with few options available to change this. Industry in general have not found it easy to adopt this promising technology or exploit advanced functionality of materials or design, and this is particularly true in the biotech industries who we target in this programme grant - there is the will and the aspiration to adopt 3D printing but the challenges in going from concept to realisation are currently too steep. A key challenge stymying the adoption of 3D printing is the ability to go from product idea to product realisation: each step of the workflow (e.g., materials, design, process, product) has significant inter-dependent challenges that means only an integrated approach can ultimately be successful. Industry tells us that they need to go significantly beyond current understanding and that manufacturing products embedded with advanced functionality needs the capability to quickly, predictably, and reliably 'dial up' performance, to meet sector specific needs and specific advanced functionalities. In essence, we need to take a bottom-up, scientific approach to integrate materials, design and process to enable us to produce advanced functional products. It is therefore critical we overcome the challenges associated with identifying, selecting, and processing materials with 3DP in order to facilitate wider adoption of this pivotal manufacturing approach, particularly within the key UK sectors of the economy: regenerative medicine, pharmaceutical and biocatalysis. Our project will consider four Research Challenges (RCs): PRODUCT: How can we exploit 3D printing and advanced polymers to create smart 21st Century products ready for use across multiple sectors? MATERIALS: How can we create the materials that can enable control over advanced functionality / release, that are 3D Printable? DESIGN: How can we use computational / algorithmic approaches to support materials identification / product design? PROCESS: How can we integrate synthesis, screening and manufacturing processes to shorten the development and translation pipeline so that we can 'dial up' materials / properties? By integrating these challenges, and taking a holistic, overarching view on how to realise advanced, highly functional bespoke 3D printed products that have the potential to transform UK high value biotechnology fields and beyond.
more_vert assignment_turned_in Project2018 - 2021Partners:Nottingham Uni Hospitals NHS Trust, Nottingham Uni Hospitals NHS TrustNottingham Uni Hospitals NHS Trust,Nottingham Uni Hospitals NHS TrustFunder: UK Research and Innovation Project Code: MR/R017344/1Funder Contribution: 217,559 GBPBackground: In the UK, four babies are born deaf each day. Children with hearing loss not only have delayed speech and language development, but also have lower educational achievements compared with children who have normal hearing. A cochlear implant is a device that can restore a sensation of hearing to children who are born or become deaf. All newborns are now tested for a hearing loss. Subsequently, children who are suitable for a cochlear implant can be identified in the first few days or months of life. Overall, speech understanding in children improves after cochlear implantation. However, some children's speech and language abilities are much worse than we would otherwise expect and we don't fully understand why this happens. The current tests for assessing levels of hearing and speech understanding are unreliable in very young children. Since children that are born deaf often receive their cochlear implants within the first year or two of life, years can often pass before parents and healthcare professionals become aware of poor speech and language skills. Currently, it is extremely difficult to distinguish between very young children with cochlear implants who are performing well and those who are performing not so well. We want to understand why some children can hear well with a cochlear implant and others cannot. We would also like to predict and identify at the earliest possible stage those children with a cochlear implant who have poor speech understanding. Aims of this research: At the Nottingham Hearing Biomedical Research Centre, we propose to use a non-invasive brain scanning method called functional near-infrared spectroscopy, or fNIRS for short, to measure brain activity in deaf children before and immediately after they receive a cochlear implant. We want to know if this brain scanning technique can be used to test how well a child can hear and understand speech instead of having to rely on existing hearing tests that are only suitable for older children. Although we have considered other methods for measuring brain activity, they are either not safe for use in patients with a cochlear implant or are associated with potential harmful effects. fNIRS is completely safe for children both before and after cochlear implantation and does not have any side effects or risks to health. Expected benefits of this research: If we are able to assess how well a child can hear using fNIRS, clinical professionals could measure speech abilities in much younger children than is presently possible. Subsequently, we will be able to identify and treat children who are not hearing so well at the earliest age. In so doing, we will identify those children with a cochlear implant who struggle with their hearing and need extra speech and language support. At present, without any idea of the abilities of our very young children with cochlear implants, valuable NHS resources for speech and language support are provided to every single child, so that some children may receive more support than they require, whilst others receive too little. fNIRS may help us to tailor and more appropriately direct speech and language support to those children who need it the most. We would also be able to give parents a more accurate explanation of how likely their child is to improve with their cochlear implant. Cochlear implants also need to be 'fine tuned' or programmed regularly so that they provide the best possible level of hearing to meet the needs of an individual. fNIRS has the potential to guide and improve this programming process. This is because it may be able to inform us on how well speech and sound is understood by the brain, years before a child is old enough to tell us, and enable us to make the appropriate adjustments to their cochlear implant. We believe that fNIRS has the potential to allow every child with a cochlear implant to have the best possible treatment that is tailored to their individual needs.
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