Medical technology is an industry for the future in Sweden. However, to
exploit the potential that exists, the industrial, academic and healthcare
sectors will have to collaborate more closely on areas such as education and
clinical research. This is the conclusion of a joint report commissioned by
the Royal Institute of Technology (KTH), Karolinska Institutet and
Karolinska University Hospital.
Sweden has an excellent record in the medtech field: Gambro, Getinge and
Elekta are prime examples of thriving companies that have been built up
around Swedish innovations. As a whole, the industry employs around 10,000
Swedes and has an annual turnover of some SKr 60 billion. However, the
recently published report Action MedTech Sweden - Key Measures for Growing
the Medical Device Industry in Sweden shows that there is considerable
untapped potential for enterprise and new jobs.
"The analysis is not only relevant to the Stockholm region but to the
country as a whole," says senior lecturer Bo Norrman at Karolinska
Institutet's Unit for Bioentrepreneurship. "But if we want medical
technology to contribute to the Swedish economy and to human health in the
future, we have to act now."
The objective of the report was to identify what needs to be done to
generate industrial growth with the cooperation of the academic and
healthcare sectors. Its conclusions include the following:
* Technical and medical faculties should identify and run joint research
projects with development potential.
* The health authorities and university hospitals should create incentives
for doctors and other healthcare personnel for conducting research in the
medtech field, while identifying the development needs of everyday clinical
practice.
* Universities and the health authorities should cooperate more closely with
industry on different key areas, such as the establishment of common
professorships and education programmes.
* The government should release more financial resources for long-term
needs-based research projects in the medtech field.
The report has been produced by consultancy organisation McKinsey & Co at
the request of KTH and in association with the medical university Karolinska
Institutet and Karolinska University Hospital. Chalmers University of
Technology and the Sahlgrenska Academy have also contributed to the report.
Its conclusions are based on some fifty interviews and four workshops with
Swedish entrepreneurs, scientists, clinicians and financiers, an
international benchmarking study and data from previous studies and reports.
Source: Press Officer Katarina Sternudd