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The new National Rehabilitation Centre heightens stroke recovery potentials

The new 70-bed National Rehabilitation Centre (NRC) has been built near Loughborough (it’s in its ‘inside-fittings’ stage now) and is set to begin accepting its first patients in 2026.

It’s an NHS facility run by Nottingham University Hospitals Trust, which will offer a significantly more intensive model of care to patients in the East Midlands than is typically available; it’s going to be staffed and run by Nottingham University Hospitals NHS Trust and the idea is that it will serve as a template for other sites. While the standard NHS offering might be around 30 to 40 minutes of therapy a day, the NRC will provide up to three to four hours of rehabilitation daily.

The NRC will share facilities with the adjacent Stanford Hall Defence Medical Rehabilitation Centre (DMRC). This includes a Computer Assisted Rehabilitation Environment (CAREN), a high-tech virtual reality system to help patients relearn movement and a state-of-the-art gait lab.

The NRC is part of the government’s New Hospital Programme and is being built by the joint venture Integrated Health Partners (IHP), which includes VINCI Building and Sir Robert McAlpine, and will be run by the Nottingham University Hospitals NHS Trust. While taxpayer funds support the NRC through the government’s New Hospital Programme to the tune of £105 million, the construction is handled by the private sector and the centre collaborates with the University of Nottingham and Loughborough University for research, training, and education alongside clinical care.

Another aspect of the NRC will be its seamless integration of clinical care, research, innovation, and training. By partnering with leading academic institutions like Loughborough and Nottingham universities, the centre aims to accelerate the translation of new research into frontline patient care. For stroke survivors, this means they could be among the first to benefit from the latest innovations in rehabilitation therapy.


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