Need help? Contact us or call us on
020 7702 2141

Future-proofing hospitals for medtech: How infrastructure and innovation go hand in hand

Last Updated on 11/06/2025 by Sarah Sarsby

At ‘The Future of MedTech – Innovating for Tomorrow’ conference, held on 13 May 2025 at The Mercure in Northampton and jointly hosted by the British Healthcare Trades Association (BHTA) and AXREM, attendees heard a compelling call to action from Nata Zaman, Deputy Director of Equipping New Hospital Programme at NHS England.

In the second part of a compelling talk titled ‘Big Picture: What is the Future Policy Landscape for Medtech?’, Nata outlined how the design and construction of new hospital infrastructure must now be inseparable from the integration of medical technologies.

Nata Zaman, Deputy Director of the New Hospital Programme at NHS England image
Nata Zaman, Deputy Director of Equipping New Hospital Programme at NHS England

The first part of the talk was delivered by Heather Hobson from the Office for Life Sciences. She outlined how the upcoming Life Sciences Sector Plan is set to shape the future for medtech companies across the UK.

Nata made it clear: “Infrastructure and medtech are no longer two separate conversations. They are now one of the same because the reality is you can’t deliver the future of healthcare if you are still designing inside it.”

This vision is at the heart of the New Hospital Programme, a government-backed initiative with £15 billion allocated every five years, providing essential stability beyond the annual financial cycle.

Importantly for BHTA members, Nata emphasised that the programme is not just about building physical spaces. “It’s about making sure that this space is ready for the kind of technologies that will be coming down the line,” she said.

Legacy hospital environments have often hindered medtech deployment, with infrastructure acting as a barrier rather than a foundation. This new approach aims to reverse that, ensuring that design and build accommodate technological innovation from the outset.

With plans entering delivery phases and hospital schemes being finalised, the window for shaping this future is open, but it won’t be forever. “Once something is built, we are locked in for decades,” Nata warned, urging the industry to engage early to avoid missed opportunities.

Central to this shift is Hospital 2.0 – a standardised platform setting the baseline for room types, technical specifications, physical systems, and sustainability targets. Nata explained that this shared foundation “means you can start designing with confidence. You don’t have to reinvent for every space and every location”. For suppliers, this unlocks the potential for scale, consistency, and smoother integration.

Hospital 2.0. image

The ambition extends well beyond current needs. “We’re trying to futureproof this. Not just for what we know we need now… but what we haven’t even thought about yet”. Key elements being built into infrastructure now include digital-ready power and connectivity, data-enabled layouts, asset tracking, and interoperable systems that support plug-and-play upgrades. As Nata put it: “If it works in one room, it should work in 500 rooms.”

Hospitals as innovation platforms image

Fundamentally, these new hospitals aim to be active platforms for innovation. “We are not just building hospitals passively anymore. We are building them as innovative platforms, places that are designed to evolve,” Nata said. This means treating technology not as an afterthought or retrofit, but as an intrinsic part of the architecture, supporting smarter workflows, sustainability, and a better experience for patients and clinicians alike.

Speaking to the medtech sector, Nata concluded: “If your products aren’t designed with this future in mind, we risk repeating the mistakes of the past.” But with collaboration, adaptability, and shared vision: “We ensure that we can deliver successful hospitals for our future generations.”