HORIZON-HLTH-2021-CARE-05-01

Enhancing quality of care and patient safety -

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Call text (as on F&T portal)

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Expected Outcome:

This topic aims at supporting activities that are enabling or contributing to one or several expected impacts of destination 4 “Ensuring access to innovative, sustainable and high-quality health care”. To that end, proposals under this topic should aim for delivering results that are directed, tailored towards and contributing to some of the following expected outcomes:

  • Health policymakers use context specific knowledge and evidence to develop inclusive, effective and affordable interventions ensuring patient safety;
  • Health care professionals know how to prevent, identify, evaluate and address risks for patient safety, and use harmonised or standardised patient-centred procedures and practice guidelines for improving patient safety developed in partnership with empowered patients;
  • Health care providers integrate harmonised and standardised practices with personalised treatment schemes;
  • Health care providers use quality assured processes to bridge inter-sectorial gaps in the clinical pathways of patients to improve patient safety;
  • An increased number of health care professionals and patients/citizens adhere to recommendations for improved patient safety.

Scope:

Patient safety remains an issue of increasing concern for EU health systems. The Commission estimates that between 8% and 12% of patients admitted to hospitals in the EU suffer from adverse effects of health care[1].

Overall, the most common types of in-hospital adverse effects are operative/surgical related, medication or drug related, and health care associated infections, half of them being preventable[2]. According to the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), more than 7 million admissions in the OECD countries result from safety lapses in primary and ambulatory care[3]. Diagnostic errors persist throughout all settings of care and contribute to increased risks and harms from the treatment[4]. Therefore, it is necessary to develop and implement coherent quality improvement and patient safety strategies in Europe. Harmonisation and standardisation of health care processes (Guidelines and Standard Operating Procedures) along the continuum of care contribute to improve quality and safety of health services, minimise the risk of errors and at the same time ensure the quality and comparability of health data. It is also a mean to address inequities in health care delivery.

The proposals should take into consideration the already existing EU-funded initiatives in this area and must address in a coherent manner at least three of the following items, but may also contain other research and innovations activities for improving patient safety:

  • Fill knowledge and practice gaps in quality of care and patient safety, including through harmonisation and standardisation of health care delivery, optimizing inter-sectoral clinical pathways and decision-making processes and tools across regions and countries.
  • Development and piloting of harmonised evidence-based interventions in a uniform and structured way in health care institutions of different EU regions and countries. This should be addressed in case studies at hospital, primary and outpatient care levels, and it should also take into consideration the diverse health care landscape across European Union and Associated Countries.
  • Research on translation of international standards and clinical guidelines into national practice for improved quality of care and patient safety.
  • Provide context-specific evidence on facilitators and barriers for transferring identified good practices across regions and countries.
  • Comprehensive comparison of practices related to clinical guidelines in European Union and Associated Countries, including the regulatory basis underpinning guidelines in each health system, the guideline development process, mechanisms of quality control, implementation modalities, and evaluation of produced recommendations.
  • Development of innovative approaches for the integration of harmonised and standardised practices with personalised treatment plans.

Proposals should consider a patient-centred approach that empowers patients/citizens, promotes a culture of dialogue and openness between health professionals and citizens/ patients, and unleashes the potential for social innovation.

The proposals should contribute to improved patient safety along the continuum of care in European Union and Associated Countries. The proposal should present a clear strategy for empowering and involving patients and caregivers in addressing the selected item(s), giving attention to both PROMs (Patient-Reported Outcome Measures) and PREMs (Patient-Reported Experience Measures). The research design, including the expected results, should carefully analyse and tackle the sex and gender dimension. The proposed evidence-based interventions, including clinical guidelines and standards, should meet health care providers’ needs and goals to increase patient safety and health care quality.

All projects funded under this topic are strongly encouraged to participate in networking and joint activities, as appropriate. These networking and joint activities could, for example, involve the participation in joint workshops, the exchange of knowledge, the development and adoption of best practices, or joint communication activities. This could also involve networking and joint activities with projects funded under other clusters and pillars of Horizon Europe, or other EU programmes, as appropriate. Therefore, proposals are expected to include a budget for the attendance to regular joint meetings and may consider to cover the costs of any other potential joint activities without the prerequisite to detail concrete joint activities at this stage. The details of these joint activities will be defined during the grant agreement preparation phase. In this regard, the Commission may take on the role of facilitator for networking and exchanges, including with relevant stakeholders, if appropriate.

[1] Communication from the Commission to the European Parliament and the Council on patient safety, including the prevention and control of healthcare-associated infections (COM (2008) 836).

[2] Schwendimann et al., The occurrence, types, consequences and preventability of in-hospital adverse events – a scoping review (BMC Health Services Research (2018) 18:521).

[3] The Economics of Patient Safety in Primary and Ambulatory Care: Flying blind (OECD, 2018).

[4] Erin P. Balogh et al., Improving Diagnosis in Health Care (The National Academy of Sciences, 2015).

News flashes

2022-02-01

We recently informed the applicants about the evaluation results for their proposals submitted under this call. The results of the evaluation are as follows:

  • Number of proposals submitted (including proposals transferred from or to other calls): 87
  • Number of inadmissible proposals: 2
  • Number of ineligible proposals: 2
  • Number of above-threshold proposals: 43
  • Total budget requested for above-threshold proposals: EUR 297.626.852
2021-10-04

Call HORIZON-HLTH-2021-CARE-05 closed on 21 September 2021. 87 proposals were submitted. The breakdown per topic is:

  • HORIZON-HLTH-2021-CARE-05-01: 41 proposals 
  • HORIZON-HLTH-2021-CARE-05-02: 42 proposals
  • HORIZON-HLTH-2021-CARE-05-04: 4 proposals

Evaluation results are expected to be communicated on Friday 28 January 2022 at the earliest.

2021-10-04

Call HORIZON-HLTH-2021-CARE-05 closed on 21 September 2021. 87 proposals were submitted. The breakdown per topic is:

  • HORIZON-HLTH-2021-CARE-05-01: 41 proposals  
  • HORIZON-HLTH-2021-CARE-05-02: 42 proposals
  • HORIZON-HLTH-2021-CARE-05-04: 4 proposals

Evaluation results are expected to be communicated on Friday 28 January 2022 at the earliest.

2021-08-20

Although the submission of the document titled ‘Template for essential information to be provided for proposals including clinical trials/studies/investigations/cohorts’ is not mandatory for the call topic you have accessed, if your proposal includes a clinical study (as it is defined in the template), you are encouraged to complete and submit this template as part of your grant application. Please disregard the second footnote in the template.

2021-06-23
The submission session is now available for: HORIZON-HLTH-2021-CARE-05-01(HORIZON-RIA), HORIZON-HLTH-2021-CARE-05-02(HORIZON-RIA), HORIZON-HLTH-2021-CARE-05-04(HORIZON-CSA)
call topic details
Call status: Closed
Opening date: 2021-06-22 (4 years ago)
Closing date: 2021-09-21 (4 years ago)
Procedure: single-stage

Budget: 25,000,000
Expected grants: 5
Contribution: 5,000,000 - 5,000,000
News flashes

This call topic has been appended 5 times by the EC with news.

  • 2022-02-01
    we recently informed the applicants abou...
  • 2021-10-04
    call horizon-hlth-2021-care-05 closed on...
  • 2021-10-04
    call horizon-hlth-2021-care-05 closed on...
  • 2021-08-20
    although the submission of the document...
  • 2021-06-23
    the submission session is now available...
Call

HORIZON-HLTH-2021-CARE-05

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