The Association of British HealthTech Industries, formerly the Association of British Healthcare Industries is a trade association for the medical technology sector in the UK. It has about 250 member companies which together provide 80% of the medical technology used in the NHS. It has offices in London. Members include the UK operations of multinational companies.
History
Formed through the 1988 merger of the British Healthcare Trades and Industry Council & British Healthcare Exports Council, the association's early work focused on the development of the Medical Devices Directives. In 2004, ABHI co-authored a Health InsuranceTask Force report, which set out the foundation for future strategic relationships between NHS, government and industry. A year later the association submitted its first major contribution to House of CommonsHealth Select Committee report: "Use of new Medical Technologies within the NHS". In 2007, ABHI co-founded the Ministerial Medical Technology Strategy Group, as a HITF recommendation to embed strategic dialogue with government and the following year published its Code of Business Practice, creating mandatory high standards for ethical compliance and professional business conduct in the industry. In 2013 the Code was opened up to non-members. In 2017 the association produced its fourth election manifesto which highlighted a set of key government asks to ensure a thriving medical technology sector. In August 2017 it complained that NHS England's Commissioning Through Evaluation project was dysfunctional, damaged the reputation of the UK and prevent patients from benefiting from innovative treatment.
Membership
Membership falls into four categories:
Corporate Membership: For manufacturers, distributors and organisations who provide non-pharmaceutical healthcare products and services. The subscription fee is based on turnover from UK operations.
Professional Associate Membership: For members of other professions or professional bodies who fall outside of the corporate membership eligibility. This includes organisations involved in law, medicine, financial services, communications, consultancy and insurance.