Our research priorities
These research priority areas reflect significant healthcare challenges currently faced around the world.
These are areas which interdisciplinary approaches in engineering are uniquely well placed to tackle and which we believe will take full advantage of the expertise available across UCL.
Our cross-cutting position in UCL’s research community will allow us to bring knowledge and innovation from multiple disciplines to bear on these pressing challenges.
We aim to coalesce and grow research activity in these areas. We believe that each one identifies an opportunity for UCL’s healthcare engineering community to be world-leading and to develop digital and medical technologies that truly transform lives across the globe.
Self, shared and community care
Timely detection, diagnostics and intervention
Timely diagnosis ultimately enables intervention at the right time. Engineering technologies underpin the development of most healthcare therapies and interventions, and we aim to pioneer advancements in this field. Focus will range from regenerative therapies and tissue engineering, to simulations that help clinicians prepare for surgical procedures or predict the efficacy of drug delivery, to the application of nano-engineering, robotics, medical imaging and augmented reality to enable surgeons to intervene with ever greater precision.
Healthy ageing and multimorbidity through the life course
Cost-effective and effective healthcare technologies
Close collaboration with international partners will offer us opportunities for bidirectional learning, will allow us to understand what the real challenges are in each region and what is needed to make technologies translatable and usable in low-resource settings. Crucially, the need for effective and cost-effective healthcare technologies is also felt keenly in countries like the UK. As the NHS faces increasing resource constraints, this need has become particularly pressing. Incorporating a frugal mindset into our research offers the potential to save the NHS significant resources, which could then be directed toward patient care instead. As sustainability becomes increasingly important, we aim to develop technologies that have longevity and usability for many years.