This presentation provides introduction to the ICT for ageing well needs and opportunities and key insight to future funding in the framework of Horizon 2020
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Insights into horizon 2020 and future funding for ageing well
1. Insights into Horizon 2020 and
future funding for Ageing Well
Nikos GIANNOULIDIS- Euroconsultants S.A- GREECE
AgeingWell 2013
2. AgeingWell 2013
Ageing Well- The Challenge
The Challenge: The number of people over 65 years old in
Europe will grow by 45% between 2008 and 2030 and it
will rise to over 30% of the population by 2060. H i g h e r
d e m a n d f o r h e a l t h c a r e ; a d a p t h e a l t h
sy s t e m s t o t h e n e e d s o f a n a g e i n g
p o p u l a t i o n w h i l e ke e p i n g t h e m
s u s t a i n a b l e i n s o c i e t i e s w i t h s m a l l e r
w o r k f o r c e
The Solution: ICTs can make life easier and better for
seniors and support social and healthcare public systems
The Opportunity: this brings new business opportunities
and huge savings in the cost of social and health care. For
example, telecare solutions can cut the costs of care
services by up to 30%.
Improving life for the elderly
3. AgeingWell 2013
Ageing Well- ICT applications
Social communication: easy access to phone and video conversation, etc.;
Daily shopping, travel, social life, public services: easy access over the internet
to order goods and services online;
Safety: making sure entrance doors and windows are locked/closed when leaving
the house or sleeping; checking for water or gas leaks; lighting systems, etc,;
Reminders: Taking medication, fulfulling household tasks;
User-friendly interfaces for all sorts of equipment in the home and outside,
taking into account that many elderly people have impairments in vision,
hearing, mobility, etc.
Telecare and telemedicine with new opportunities for providing medical care at
home
Personal health systems include wearable and portable systems for monitoring
and diagnosis, fall prevention, therapy, among others;
Support for people with cognitive problems and their carers to stay at home for
longer and remain active for as long as possible.
ICT Solutions for the elderly
4. AgeingWell 2013
Active and Healthy Ageing EIP
http://ec.europa.eu/research/innovation-
union/index_en.cfm?section=active-healthy-ageing&pg=about
5. AgeingWell 2013
Target: +2 Healthy Life Years by 2020
A Triple Win For Europe
Health & quality of life of European citizens, incl. older people
Improving
Long-term sustainability & efficiency of Europe’s health and social
care systemsSupporting
Competitiveness & markets for innovative products & services =
growth and jobs
Fostering
6. AgeingWell 2013
Ageing Well- The overall EU picture
eHealth
Proven Ideas
Horizon 2020
eHealth
Health
ICT &
Ageing
Horizon 2020
New
Knowledge
MoreYearsBetter
Lives
Alzheimer’s
JPIs
n
Public Health
Programme
Structural
Funds
EIB
ESF
CEF
Deployment supportEvidence and
innovation
guidelines
Research Innovation Deployment
New solutions
AAL JP
V2
Active and Healthy Ageing Partnership
7. AgeingWell 2013
European Innovation Partnership on Active & Healthy Ageing
health &
quality of life
of European
citizens
growth &
expansion
of EU
industry
sustainable
& efficient
care
systems
+2 HLY by 2020
Triple win for Europe Improving prescriptions and
adherence to treatment
Better management of health:
preventing falls
Preventing functional decline &
frailty
Integrated care for chronic
conditions, incl. telecare
ICT solutions for independent
living & active ageing
Age-friendly cities and
environments
Specific actions
crosscutting, connecting & engaging stakeholders across sectors, from private & public sector
Pillar I
Prevention
screening
early
diagnosis
Pillar II
Care &
cure
Pillar III
Independent
living &
active ageing
8. AgeingWell 2013
Barriers to deployment (eHealth incl. Ageing Well)
• lack of awareness of, and confidence in eHealth solutions among patients,
citizens and healthcare professionals;
• lack of interoperability between eHealth solutions;
• limited large-scale evidence of the cost-effectiveness of eHealth tools and
services;
• lack of legal clarity for health and wellbeing mobile applications and the lack
of transparency regarding the utilisation of data collected by such applications;
• inadequate or fragmented legal frameworks including the lack of
reimbursement schemes for eHealth services;
• high start-up costs involved in setting up eHealth systems;
• regional differences in accessing ICT services, limited access in deprived areas
10. AgeingWell 2013
Horizon 2020
•The new 80 billion euro research and innovation funding programme (2014-
2020)
•A single programme bringing together three separate programmes/ initiatives *
•Coupling research to innovation – from research to retail, all forms of
innovation
•Focus on societal challenges facing EU society, e.g. health, clean energy and
transport
•Simplified access, for all companies, universities, institutes in all EU countries
and beyond
* The 7th Research Framework Programme (FP7), innovation aspects of Competitiveness and Innovation
Framework Programme (CIP), EU contribution to the European Institute of Innovation and Technology (EIT)
15. AgeingWell 2013
Simplification: Rules for Participation
1. A single set of rules
Adapted for the whole research and innovation cycle
Covering all research programmes and funding bodies
Aligned to the Financial Regulation, coherent with other new EU Programmes
2. One project – one funding rate
Maximum of 100% of the total eligible costs (except for actions close to market,
where a 70% maximum will apply)
Indirect eligible costs: a flat rate of 20% of direct eligible costs
3. Simple evaluation criteria
Excellence – Impact – Implementation (Excellence only, for the ERC)
4. New forms of funding aimed at innovation: pre-commercial
procurement, inducement prizes, dedicated loan and equity instruments
5. International participation: facilitated but better protecting
EU interests
16. AgeingWell 2013
Simplification: Rules for Participation
6. Simpler rules for grants: broader acceptance of participants
accounting practices for direct costs, flat rate for indirect costs, no time-sheets for
personnel working full time on a project, possibility of output-based grants
7. Fewer, better targeted controls and audits
Lowest possible level of requirements for submission of audit certificates without
undermining sound financial management
Audit strategy focused on risk and fraud prevention
8. Improved rules on intellectual property
Balance between legal security and flexibility
Tailor-made IPR provisions for new forms of funding
A new emphasis on open access to research publications
17. AgeingWell 2013
ICT in Horizon 2020
•The overall aim of EU research and innovation in information and
communication (ICTs) under Horizon 2020 is to bring the benefits
of progress in these technologies to European citizens and
businesses.
•ICT is essential to address Europe's societal challenges. It brings
unique responses e.g. to the growing needs for sustainable
healthcare and ageing well, for better security and privacy, for a
lower carbon economy and for intelligent transport.
18. AgeingWell 2013
ICT in Horizon 2020- Budgetary issues
Unofficial proposal, 16 billion euros for ICT budget
•4 billion euros for Scientific Excellence (mostly FET actions).
•8 billion euros for Industrial Leadership; some to Public-Private Partnerships
(PPPs)
•4 billion euros for Societal Challenges nominally for ICT activities
…in the Societal Challenges it may be difficult to isolate this nominal 4 billion
euros for ICT, as the themes for Societal Challenges are sector based …
•Health, demographic change and well-being;
•Food security, sustainable agriculture, marine and maritime research, and the
bio-economy;
•Secure, clean and efficient energy;
•Smart, green and integrated transport;
•Climate action, resource efficiency and raw materials;
•Inclusive, innovative and secure societies.
19. AgeingWell 2013
Roadmap Horizon 2020
•Ongoing: Parliament and Council negotiations on Commission
proposals and budget for Horizon 2020
•2012- 2013: Final calls under 7th Framework Programme for
Research to bridge gap towards Horizon 2020
•By end 2013: Adoption of legislative acts by Parliament and
Council on Horizon 2020
•1/1/2014: Horizon 2020 starts; launch of first calls, good luck!
Ladies and Gentlemen, I would like to thank the organisers of this event, namely the Applied Research and Communications Fund for the invitation. We are happy to participate in this very interesting event focusing on ICT and Ageing Well and eHealth in general. My name is Nikos Giannoulidis, I am a consultant and I work for Euroconsultants S.A. from Greece which actively participates in the Thematic Network “AgeingWell” that supports the organisation of this event. Euroconsultants is one of the biggest technology and developments consultancies in the South East Europe area and it has continuous presence in Bulgaria for more than 20 years, which is sealed with the presence of Euroconsultants Bulgaria, the director of which Mr. Eugeniy Ivanov you had the opportunity to listen to earlier discussing “Opportunities for EU funding of e-health in Bulgaria”.Euroconsultants is active in the development of partnerships in various fields of ICT applications including AgeingWell; an additional asset is the subsidiary ICT company Gnomon Informatics which develops various ICT applications for eHealth, eProcurement, etc.My presentation aims to provide some insights into Horizon 2020, the future key EU instrument funding research and innovation across all areas of interest.
But before that, I would like to pinpoint the importance of ICT in AgeingWell…
ICT provides a vast array of solutions and applications for the elderly…to name a few…
Various initiatives are developed in support of Active and Healthy Ageing…in particular the most important is the Active and Healthy Ageing European Innovation Partnership…The pilot Partnership will aim to achieve this by bringing together key stakeholders (end users, public authorities, industry); all actors in the innovation cycle, from research to adoption (adaptation), along with those engaged in standardisation and regulation. The pilot partnership provides these actors with a forum in which they can cooperate, united around a common vision that values older people and their contribution to society, identify and overcome potential innovations barriers and mobilise instruments.
Various funding instruments available for different phases of the development of innovative ICT products and services for AgeingWell…
3 key pillars….a) Prevention, screening and early diagnosis, b) Care and cure, c) Independent living and active ageingSpecific actions….
However, there are significant challenges and barriers to be tackled in order to take full advantage of the potential that ICT proposes…this evidence primarily addresses eHealth in general, however Ageing Well is also subject to these limitationsThese are limitations that should be tackled through science and innovation but also EU cooperation of all key stakeholders (policy makers, industry, healthcare systems and professionals, elderly people, etc.)The 2nd part of my presentation will focus to Horizon 2020 and the opportunities for ICT for AgeingWell innovation…although Horizon 2020 is still in the phase of preparation and deployment, the Workprogrammes are not available yet, etc. we can still provide some insights and pinpoint where you should focus your interest if you are interested in ICT for AgeingWell…
Europe 2020 is the EU's growth strategy for the coming decade.In a changing world, we want the EU to become a smart, sustainable and inclusive economy. These three mutually reinforcing priorities should help the EU and the Member States deliver high levels of employment, productivity and social cohesion.Concretely, the Union has set five ambitious objectives - on employment, innovation, education, social inclusion and climate/energy - to be reached by 2020. Each Member State has adopted its own national targets in each of these areas. Concrete actions at EU and national levels underpin the strategy.The Innovation Union is one of the seven flagship initiatives of the Europe 2020 strategy for a smart, sustainable and inclusive economy. The Innovation Union plan contains over thirty actions points, with the aim to do three things:- make Europe into a world-class science performer;remove obstacles to innovation – like expensive patenting, market fragmentation, slow standard-setting and skills shortages – which currently prevent ideas getting quickly to market; and revolutionise the way public and private sectors work together, notably through Innovation Partnerships between the European institutions, national and regional authorities and business.
Horizon 2020 is the financial instrument implementing the Innovation Union, aEurope 2020 flagship initiative aimed at securing Europe's global competitiveness. Running from 2014 to 2020 with an €80 billion budget, the EU’s new programme for research and innovation is part of the drive to create new growth and jobs in Europe.
Strengthen the EU’s position in science with a dedicated budget of € 24 598 million. This will provide a boost to top-level research in Europe, including an increase in funding of 77% for the very successful European Research Council (ERC).Strengthen industrial leadership in innovation € 17 938 million. This includes major investment in key technologies, greater access to capital and support for SMEs.Provide € 31 748 million to help address major concerns shared by all Europeans such as climate change, developing sustainable transport and mobility, making renewable energy more affordable, ensuring food safety and security, or coping with the challenge of an ageing population.
Horizon 2020 will raise the level of excellence in Europe's science base and ensure a steady stream of world-class research to secure Europe's long-term competitiveness. It will support the best ideas, develop talent within Europe, provide researchers with access to priority research infrastructure, and make Europe an attractive location for the world's best researchers
Leadership in enabling and industrial technologies: will support the development of technologies underpinning innovation across a range of sectors, including ICT and space. Horizon 2020 will have a strong focus on developing European industrial capabilities in Key Enabling Technologies (KETs)
Horizon 2020 reflects the policy priorities of the Europe 2020 strategy and addresses major concerns shared by citizens in Europe and elsewhere. A challenge-based approach will bring together resources and knowledge across different fields, technologies and disciplines, including social sciences and the humanities. This will cover activities from research to market with a new focus on innovation-related activities, such as piloting, demonstration, test-beds, and support for public procurement and market uptake. It will include establishing links with the activities of the European Innovation Partnerships
Euroconsultants Greece and Euroconsultants Bulgaria are interested in developing partnerships, ideas and proposals in the upcoming EU and national programmes and we will be mostly please to discuss with entities from Bulgaria and beyond. We will continue our active participation in the AW network and take advantage of our knowledge and network of stakeholders in view of furthering cooperation.Thank you vey much for your attention, I will be happy to address any questions you may have