RCI Research is part of Defence Medical Services (DMS).
RCI Research contains 9 areas:
- anaesthesia and critical care
- emergency medicine
- general practice
- mental health
- medicine
- nursing
- rehabilitation
- surgery and trauma
- trauma and orthopaedics
The DMS’ 6 priority research areas are:
- optimising mental health
- preventing and treating musculoskeletal injury
- delivering a workforce that is ‘ready and able’
- tackling endemic, epidemic, and environmental threats
- closing the sophistication gap between hospital-based and far forward care
- Combat Casualty Care – pushing the envelope of care far forward
RCI Research works with academic and industry collaborators and funds research activity.
Express interest in funding on Contracts Finder
Email ukstratcom-dms-rci-dmsrsg@mod.gov.uk for more information.
RCI Research teams
Anaesthesia and critical care
Improves outcomes for critically ill and injured military patients by optimising diagnosis and treatment.
Research priorities:
- increasing understanding of the pathogenesis of shock states and impaired tissue perfusion in order to develop more effective treatments
- adapting point of care diagnostics, relevant to critical illness, to the deployed environment
- exploiting data, particularly from physiological monitoring, to better understand the pathogenesis of critical injury and direct treatments
Emergency medicine
Improves understanding of how to best resuscitate the most severely ill or injured military patient – saving lives with data.
Research priorities:
- blood
- non-compressible haemorrhage
- battlefield analgesia
- cold weather medicine
- mass casualty
General practice
Improves health outcomes and experiences of UK Service Personnel through research, GP training and educational delivery.
Research priorities:
- developing an evidence base for educational interventions which improve the abilities and capacity of Defence General Practitioners
- bridging the gender gap in military research with specific focus on improving outcomes and lived experience
- understanding behaviours and decision making of military clinicians
- interventions for lifestyle behaviour change
Mental health
Acts as the uniformed focus for military mental health research for the UK Armed Forces.
Recent publications via King’s College London
Research priorities:
- providing advice for the Surgeon General about international developments in military mental health
- assisting in the development (and evaluation) of military mental health support interventions
- undertaking Operational Mental Health Needs Evaluations
Medicine
Improves the diagnosis, treatment and prevention of disease, injury, and illness in military personnel through research, clinical innovation and educational activities.
Research priorities:
- infectious diseases and tropical medicine (including enteric diseases)
- environmental medicine (for heat, cold and altitude illnesses)
- military aspects of cardiovascular medicine
- medical aspects of human performance
- Chemical-Biological-Radiological-Nuclear (CBRN) medicine
- laboratory aspects of transfusion medicine
Nursing
Provides leadership, mentorship and educational support to nurses and allied healthcare professionals. Enhances patient care by improving practice and service delivery.
Research priorities:
- operational healthcare ethics
- wellbeing and resilience
- advancing practice in the evolving operational environment
- optimising patient care in the evolving operational environment
Rehabilitation
Advances the science of rehabilitation to maximise the number of personnel fit for operations.
Research priorities:
- provide a central hub for clinical research activity across the UK Defence Rehabilitation
- deliver, develop and maintain a programme of class-leading research to promote continuous improvement in the effectiveness and quality of clinical rehabilitation provided to injured UK military personnel
- trauma rehabilitation and outcomes
- treatment and prevention of musculoskeletal injuries
Surgery and trauma
Pioneers military surgical research and innovation to save lives and restore health.
Research priorities:
- trauma physiology
- general surgery
- vascular surgery
- global and humanitarian surgery
- surgical informatics
- surgical education
- oral and maxillofacial surgery
- plastic surgery
- acoustic trauma
Trauma and orthopaedics
Improves outcomes for limb injuries through research and innovation.
Research priorities:
- understanding and protecting from blast and ballistic injury
- development of skeletal fixation devices following combat trauma
- reducing bleeding from extremity and pelvic trauma
- optimising bone healing following trauma
- reducing musculoskeletal injury by occupational exposure
Updates to this page
Published 28 October 2024