In September 2024, SWAG Cancer Alliance, in partnership with Health Innovation West of England, launched a funding call to support the adoption and spread of innovations that improve earlier diagnosis in cancer care.
This initiative is part of our commitment to building a culture of innovation, a vital step toward achieving earlier cancer diagnosis and better outcomes for patients. We encouraged applications from across the system, including:
- Primary and Secondary Care organisations
- Voluntary, Community and Social Enterprise (VCSE) groups
- Social Care organisations
- Other system stakeholders
We welcomed collaborative proposals that addressed local priorities and supported the NHS Long Term Plan goal of diagnosing 75% of cancers at stages 1 and 2 by 2028.
Applications were reviewed by a multi-disciplinary panel, including patients, clinicians, managers, ICB reps, and Health Innovation Network colleagues with commercial understanding, and assessed against the criteria. As a result of this, we have funded seven projects:
What is a funding call?
A funding call is an open invitation for organisations to apply for financial support to develop or expand projects that align with specific goals, in this case, innovations that improve early cancer diagnosis.
Applicants submit proposals outlining their ideas, expected impact, and how the funding will be used. Successful bids receive funding to implement their projects within a defined timeframe.
Funding details
- Maximum funding per project: £75,000
- Funding type: Non-recurrent, revenue
- Project duration: 12 - 18 months
- Evaluation: Projects will undergo independent evaluation where appropriate, to be completed within 2 years of the funding being awarded.
Funding priorities
We focused on later-stage innovations ready for adoption or spread, particularly those that:
- Had been implemented outside the SWAG area with proven benefits and were now ready to be adopted
- Had been successfully implemented within SWAG and were ready to scale across the region
We prioritised projects that:
- Targeted high-volume late-stage cancer types
- Oesophagael
- Lung
- Pancreatic
- Non-Hodgkin's Lymphoma
- Addressed health inequalities, especially in CORE20PLUS and inclusion health groups
Key Assessment Criteria
Innovation Readiness
- CE mark for medical devices
- Compliance with NICE standards and DTAC for digital health technologies
Collaboration & Engagement
- Cross-sector collaboration (e.g. Primary Care, VCSE, patient groups)
- Evidence of patient/service user engagement
Benefits to Pathways & Patients
- Clear impact on earlier diagnosis
- Evidence of benefits and outcomes
Health Inequalities
- Tackles inequalities without widening gaps
- Health inequalities impact assessment encouraged
Evaluation & Impact
- Defined KPIs and evaluation plan
- Data collection on age, gender, deprivation
- Qualitative data and patient experience insights
Sustainability & Transferability
- Potential to scale or apply to other pathways
- Plans for long-term sustainability or transition to business as usual