New Value Based Procurement guidance for NHS buyers of medical technology: key points for procurement teams and suppliers
This website will offer limited functionality in this browser. We only support the recent versions of major browsers like Chrome, Firefox, Safari, and Edge.
The Department of Health and Social Care has published the long-awaited guidance on Value Based Procurement (VBP) for NHS buyers of medical technology. The guidance sets out the issues and questions that NHS buyers should use to assess value when procuring medical technology, which we summarise below.
The shift in focus from the initial purchase price to instead assess the value over the lifecycle of a medical product, and its impact across the healthcare system, has been a hot topic in the sector for many years.
The new guidance now formalises the approach NHS buyers should take when assessing medical technology during procurement exercises.
VBP is intended to focus on how a product or solution can best deliver improved outcomes, reduce total costs across the patient pathway, and provide long-term benefits to all partners in the health system. It moves beyond traditional price-focused procurement to consider the wider value that medical devices and related services can bring.
The guidance is intended to be applied by NHS buyers to procurement of medical devices, including services that use medical devices, at the assessment stage of the procurement process (that is, in relation to the evaluation of tenders). It has a broad scope and covers consumables, implantables, general medical devices, medical equipment, capital equipment, in vitro diagnostics and point of care testing, imaging products, digital products and AI products, in both primary and secondary care settings.
The guidance is presented as a national standard and contains mandatory weighting requirements, but it does not cover the end-to-end procurement process. Buyers must still consider whether VBP is appropriate and proportionate to the value, complexity and risk of the requirement, as well as compliance with the applicable procurement regime (broadly speaking the Procurement Act 2023 for goods and the NHS Provider Selection Regime for healthcare services).
The five value domains
Under the new framework, value is assessed against five domains. Buyers should choose the domains that are most relevant to the medical product they are buying. Within each domain, buyers should choose from the set questions provided. The guidance provides example questions, validation bases and supporting information that buyers can adapt to the particular procurement:
The guidance sets mandatory weighting requirements that NHS buyers must follow. The combined five value domains must have a minimum total weighting of 60%, with the social value domain requiring a minimum weighting of 10% in line with the NHS Social Value Playbook. Whole life cost (the total cost incurred over the lifetime of a product) should have a maximum weighting of 40%.
Legal compliance
Importantly, the guidance does not replace existing legal requirements. NHS buyers must seek their own legal advice to ensure that the application of this guidance to their procurement is lawful and fully compliant with the Procurement Act 2023 (or NHS Provider Selection Regime as relevant where healthcare services are also being provided).
Implementation in practice
There is a clear tension between asking NHS buyers to move away from focussing on initial price, while also mandating budget reductions. The reality of this is that some recent NHS procurements still place a significant focus on initial product cost. Challenges also remain over the extent to which suppliers will have access to robust evidence from customers in relation to issues such as improvement to pathways and outcomes when that information is not always reliably available.
Procurement teams will also need to receive training in how to implement VBP, what products it is most suitable for and how the domains can be applied in practice.
The guidance recognises the challenge of properly measuring value and emphasises that it must be deliverable within the buyer’s operating environment and resource constraints, and that adoption support should be planned so value is implemented in practice and not only described at tender stage. The ability of procurement teams and suppliers to understand how this can be done in practice and design processes which incentivise it, will be important in determining how successfully the NHS can implement the shift to Value Based Procurement.
Practical steps for NHS buyers
NHS trusts and healthcare providers will need to:
Implications for suppliers
Medical technology suppliers should be prepared to provide detailed evidence and method statements addressing the value domains, including real-world data on outcomes. Suppliers will need to demonstrate how their products deliver measurable benefits against established baselines.
Taking an active role in pre-market engagement can provide an opportunity to set expectations about what data is available, what “good” looks like and how the VBP domains can be applied in practice to the relevant products (which can vary hugely depending on the type of product and characteristics of the market).
How we can help
Our specialist healthcare team works with NHS bodies and suppliers on understanding and implementing Value Based Procurement principles, while ensuring compliance with the Procurement Act 2023 and/or NHS Provider Selection Regime. Please contact us if you would like to discuss how these changes may affect your organisation.
This article was written by Shauna McGinn and Rory Trust.
Want more Burges Salmon content? Add us as a preferred source on Google to your favourites list for content and news you can trust.
Update your preferred sourcesBe sure to follow us on LinkedIn and stay up to date with all the latest from Burges Salmon.
Follow us