Trisha Greenhalgh
1*, Nick Fahy
1, Sara Shaw
11 Nuffield Department of Primary Care Health Sciences, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK
Abstract
The current system of health technology development is characterised by multiple misalignments. The “supply”
side (innovation policy-makers, entrepreneurs, investors) and the “demand” side (health policy-makers,
regulators, health technology assessment, purchasers) operate under different – and conflicting – logics. The
system is less a “pathway” than an unstable ecosystem of multiple interacting sub-systems. “Value” means
different things to each of the numerous actors involved. Supply-side dynamics are built on fictions; regulatory
checks and balances are designed to assure quality, safety and efficacy, not to ensure that technologies entering
the market are either desirable or cost-effective. Assessment of comparative and cost-effectiveness usually comes
too late in the process to shape an innovation’s development.
We offer no simple solutions to these problems, but in the spirit of commencing a much-needed public debate,
we suggest some tentative ways forward. First, universities and public research funders should play a more
proactive role in shaping the system. Second, the role of industry in forging long-term strategic partnerships for
public benefit should be acknowledged (though not uncritically). Third, models of “responsible innovation” and
public input to research priority-setting should be explored. Finally, the evidence base on how best to govern
inter-sectoral health research partnerships should be developed and applied.