The West Midlands Health Tech Innovation Accelerator (WMHTIA) – which is led by the University of Birmingham - has realised nearly £50m in private co-investment fundraising over the first two years of delivery.
The private co-investment figure triples the initial £14.5m fund the WMHTIA received from the Innovation Accelerator programme, which is led by Innovate UK on behalf of UK Research and Innovation and the Department for Science, Innovation and Technology.
Private co-investment
A total of £49.4m co-investment realised by the WMHTIA has been generated from private sources. These include matched contributions, but the majority comes from £36.3m leveraged directly from investors committing funds into enterprises supported by the WMHTIA.
The WMHTIA has therefore already realised £3.40 private co-investment for every £1 of funding from Innovate UK, exceeding the 2:1 lifetime target for the Innovation Accelerator programme.
This level of investment has allowed numerous WMHTIA-supported companies to push their innovations closer towards market readiness – helping groundbreaking technologies reach patients sooner.
A selection of leading innovators showcased their technologies to Richard Parker, Mayor of West Midlands, and Preet Gill, MP for Edgbaston, during a recent ministerial visit.
Additional funds raised through the WMHTIA
The WMHTIA has united 21 partners across academia, industry, and NHS, to provide innovators with support they need in developing and commercialising their technologies.
Notably, the programme has shown to effectively strengthen the regional Health Tech sector’s ability to secure funding, particularly through targeted bid writing support. As a result, enterprises supported by the WMHTIA successfully secured an additional £10m in national grants from organisations such as NIHR, Eureka, and Innovate UK.
Combining the total private and public sources of funding, the WMHTIA has realised £67.3m following its initial £14.5m investment from the IA programme.
The scale of this initial co-investment demonstrates the potential for this sector to continue to grow – supporting the West Midlands’ ambitions around economic growth.