Skip to main navigation Skip to main content
Home
  • About us
    • Introducing UUK
    • Our members
    • Careers
      • Vacancies
      • What it's like to work at UUK
      • An inclusive, diverse place to work
    • Our history
    • People
    • Governance, annual reports and accounts
      • Articles of Association
      • Our Board
      • Membership criteria
      • Annual reports and accounts
    • Who we work with
    • Our home: Woburn House
  • Topics
    • Teaching, learning and quality
      • Quality and standards
      • Regulation
      • Ways of learning
      • Working with employers
      • Freedom of speech
    • Funding, finance and operations
      • Security and risk
      • Transformation and efficiency
      • University funding
      • Pensions
    • Impact of universities
      • Communities and social responsibility
      • Discoveries, inventions and global challenges
      • Skills and economy
      • Transforming people’s lives
    • Research and innovation
      • Innovation and big ideas
      • Knowledge exchange
      • Research and funding
      • Research standards, ethics and culture
    • Health and wellbeing
      • Mental health
      • Suicide prevention
    • Equality, diversity and inclusion
      • Improving social mobility
      • Opportunities after graduation
      • Safe and inclusive campuses
      • Student success
    • Students
      • Admissions
      • Student finance
      • Student support
      • Student voices and experiences
    • Climate and sustainability
    • International
      • International experience and mobility
      • International research collaboration
      • International staff and students
      • Ukraine
  • What we do
    • Policy and research
      • Policy: an overview
      • Publications
      • Policy & Research team
    • Supporting our members
      • What we do for our members
      • Member benefits
      • Supporting vice-chancellors
      • Events
        • Speak at our events
        • Sponsorship Opportunities
        • Events team
      • Members' meetings and conference
      • Partnership with Studiosity
      • Specialist Institutions Forum
      • Strategy, insight and member engagement team
    • Creating a voice for our members
      • An overview
      • Campaigns
        • Unlock potential with contextual admissions
          • Introduction
          • How to get involved?
        • Industrial strategy
          • Introduction
          • Supporting evidence
          • Advanced manufacturing
          • Clean energy industries
          • Creative industries
          • Defence
          • Digital and technologies
          • Financial services
          • Life sciences
          • Professional and business services
        • Access to success
          • Our action plan for opportunity: making the difference for students  
          • Unlock potential with contextual admissions
          • Collaborate in local cold spots to raise aspirations
          • Set up all students for success with an adequate maintenance package
          • Create career-ready graduates with targeted careers services
        • Unis start up the UK
          • How do universities support start-ups?
          • What impact do start-ups have?
          • What’s the future of university start-ups?
          • Case studies: Enhancing educational outcomes
          • Case studies: Harnessing the tech revolution
          • Case studies: Improving everyday life
          • Case studies: Powering the energy transition
          • Case studies: Promoting sustainable solutions
          • Case studies: Supporting a healthier nation
        • #WeAreInternational
          • The campaign
          • Campaign resources
          • #WeAreInternational student stories
          • #WeAreInternational: Transforming Lives part 2
        • #TwinForHope
          • The campaign
          • Background
          • Our impact
        • Our past campaigns
          • 100 faces
          • Powering the NHS
            • Five-point plan for healthcare education and training
            • Survey of young people's attitudes to NHS careers
          • Getting Results
          • Made At Uni
          • We Are Together
      • Media releases
      • Media team
      • Communications team
    • International
    • Work in parliament
      • Political affairs: an overview
      • All-Party Parliamentary University Group
      • Parliamentary briefings and submissions
      • Political Affairs Network
  • Latest
    • News
    • Events
      • Past events
    • Insights and analysis
    • Newsletter
    • Podcasts
    • Publications
  • Media
  • Events
  • International

Search

  • - Any -
  • Covid
  • Equality, diversity and inclusion
  • Funding, finance and operations
  • Health and wellbeing
  • Impact of universities
  • International
  • Research and innovation
  • Students
  • Sustainability and climate
  • Teaching, learning and quality
  • - Any -
  • UUKi Blog
  • UUKi Insights
  • Insights and analysis
  • Media releases
  • News
  • Publications
  • UUKi Publications
  • UUKi News
  • - Any -
  • Campaign
  • Event
  • Basic page
  • Profile
  • Newest first
  • Oldest first
  • A -> Z
  • Z -> A
  • Relevance

Or browse by topic

  • Teaching, learning and quality
  • Funding, finance and operations
  • Impact of universities
  • Research and innovation
  • Health and wellbeing
  • Equality, diversity and inclusion
  • Students
  • Climate and sustainability
  • International

Breadcrumb

  1. Home
  2. What we do
  3. Creating a voice for our members
  4. Campaigns
  5. Industrial strategy

Life sciences

The life sciences sector comprises of businesses involved in developing and/or producing their own pharmaceutical products and all businesses whose primary business involves developing and producing medical technology products, ranging from single-use consumables to complex hospital equipment, including digital health products.

Case studies

My Life SC1ence, King's College London

King’s College London (KCL) is working to make careers in London’s life sciences and MedTech sectors more accessible for the next generation.

In collaboration with Lambeth Council, We Rise Brixton, The Brixton Project and the Bureau of Silly Ideas, KCL launched My Life SC1ence to demystify these industries and provide hands-on experience.

Targeting 16–17-year-olds in education and young people aged 16+ who are not in education, employment or training (NEET), the programme connects participants with 40 professional volunteers from diverse backgrounds. Hosted at King’s London Institute for Healthcare Engineering, they explored cutting-edge medical technologies, discovered varied career pathways, and took part in industry-led discussions.

Twenty participants, paid for their time, also created two short films – What Is Life Science? and Job Roles in Life Science – to further break down barriers for others.

Jessica - My Life SC1ence participant wears a white top and a bandana. Jessica is standing in front of a white background
Jessica, My Life SC1ence participant

Supported by the Mayor of London and funded through the UK Shared Prosperity Fund, the programme contributes to local economic regeneration, with £38.1m of London’s allocation directed to the Mayor’s People and Skills priority. The impact has been immediate, with half of NEET participants securing meaningful employment afterwards. Jessica, one of the young people who took part in the programme, described how it created new career possibilities. 

Before this project, I wasn’t in higher education or work. Traumatic experiences at school had left me struggling with social anxiety, making it difficult to put myself out there, let alone actively seek a job. I felt stuck.

Through the project, I not only discovered the vast career opportunities in life sciences – beyond just medicine and research – but also gained the confidence to take my own steps forward.

Jessica

My Life SC1ence participant

Jessica has since earned her phlebotomy licence and is actively seeking opportunities in healthcare – something that once felt impossible.

Remote video URL

Compassionate Design to Global Impact – The HUG™ Spin-Out Story, Cardiff Metropolitan University

The Hug device sitting on a wooden chair with text in the bottom right corner reading Hug by Laugh
Cardiff Metropolitan University’s HUG™

Cardiff Metropolitan University’s HUG™ by the university’s LAUGH research team, is transforming the quality of life for people living with advanced dementia. 

The product is designed to reduce anxiety and improve wellbeing by providing emotional and sensory support to people who are isolated, distressed, or in end-of-life care. Shaped like a comforting soft body with weighted limbs, a simulated heartbeat and a speaker that plays personalised music, clinical trials across NHS hospitals and care homes demonstrated that HUG™ improves communication, reduces distress and increases physical engagement.

In a six-month evaluation funded by the Welsh Government, 87% of care home residents using HUG™ showed notable improvements in wellbeing, posture and communication. 

The spin out company HUG by LAUGH Ltd is supported by Cardiff Met, the Alzheimer’s Society Accelerator Programme and the NHS. The company has created new jobs and manufactures HUG™s, which are available to purchase online or via NHS prescription. Over 5,000 individuals across the UK and internationally – including Australia, Canada and Scandinavia – have benefited from the project.

HUG™ has won multiple national awards, including Overall Winner at the 2020 Tech4Good Awards and is cited in UK Government dementia care strategy case studies. 

The BioHub Birmingham and Unit 9: bridging the gap at the early stages of innovation, University of Birmingham

Remote video URL

The University of Birmingham plays a central role in advancing life sciences through its support for early-stage biomedical innovation. Two key incubators on its campus—BioHub Birmingham® and Unit 9—are designed to nurture Med Tech and Diagnostics companies, aligning with the Industrial Strategy Life Sciences Sector Plan, which identified Med Tech and Diagnostics as priority areas for the West Midlands.

BioHub Birmingham® is a fully serviced biomedical incubator that supports companies from proof of concept to expansion. It fosters a collaborative environment where tenant scientific teams interact with university researchers and recruit from its graduate talent pool. The facility offers laboratory and office space, shared equipment and access to specialist resources across the University. Tenants also benefit from full-time lab staff and business support from University of Birmingham Enterprise Ltd. As companies grow, the University helps them transition to larger facilities within the campus or region, ensuring continued development within the local ecosystem.

Unit 9 complements BioHub by providing flexible, short-term incubation space for pre-revenue companies at the start of their commercialisation journey. It caters to scientific entrepreneurs who often lack the resources or experience to commit to long-term leases or purchase expensive equipment. Unit 9 offers access to shared equipment, cell culture and microbiology facilities at BioHub, and reduced consumable costs through a biomedical purchasing consortium. Tenants receive tailored business support, funding guidance from Entrepreneurs-in-Residence, and access to communal spaces at Birmingham Research Park, fostering a vibrant, collaborative environment.

Together, these incubators demonstrate the University of Birmingham’s commitment to translating biomedical research into commercial success. By providing infrastructure, expertise and strategic support, the university is cultivating a thriving life sciences cluster that drives innovation, supports regional growth and contributes to the UK’s leadership in med tech and diagnostics.

Financial services
Professional and business services

Industrial strategy

  • Introduction
  • Supporting evidence
  • Advanced manufacturing
  • Clean energy industries
  • Creative industries
  • Defence
  • Digital and technologies
  • Financial services
  • Life sciences
  • Professional and business services

Share

  • Tweet this
  • Share linkedin
  • Share on Bluesky

Get monthly updates of our work, events, and higher education news

Subscribe
Back to top
Home

Woburn House, 20 Tavistock Square,
London, WC1H 9HQ
-
+44(0)20 7419 4111
[email protected]

  • About us
    • Introducing UUK
    • Our members
    • Careers
    • Our history
    • People
    • Governance, annual reports and accounts
    • Who we work with
    • Our home: Woburn House
  • Topics
    • Teaching, learning and quality
    • Funding, finance and operations
    • Impact of universities
    • Research and innovation
    • Health and wellbeing
    • Equality, diversity and inclusion
    • Students
    • Climate and sustainability
    • International
  • What we do
    • Policy and research
    • Supporting our members
    • Creating a voice for our members
    • International
    • Work in parliament
  • Latest
    • News
    • Events
    • Insights and analysis
    • Newsletter
    • Podcasts
    • Publications
  • Contact us
  • Privacy notice
  • Modern Slavery Statement
  • Cookies
  • Accessibility

© Copyright Universities UK

Universities UK a charity registered in England and Wales (1001127) and Scotland (SC052497). A company limited by guarantee and registered in England and Wales Company No. 2517018.
Registered Office: Woburn House, 20 Tavistock Square, London, WC1H 9HQ.

  • Follow us on Instagram
  • Follow us on Twitter
  • Follow us on LinkedIn
  • Subscribe on Bluesky

Site by Effusion