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A group of people standing in front of a gray brick building with the logo of CAMLS on it

Leaders from 23 life sciences companies in Great Britain and Northern Ireland spent a week learning about Florida as an innovation center. Their tour included USF Health's Center for Advanced Medical Learning and Simulation, the USF Research Park and an opportunity to meet USF's research and innovation leaders. Photo credit: Andres Faza/USF

USF students and researchers benefit from a new era of strengthened relations between Florida and the U.K.

group of people in a bright lobby with tour guide

The UK life sciences delegation toured the USF Research Park, including Discovery Hall where the Florida Inventors Hall of Fame is featured. Photo credit: USF Connect

Florida and the U.K. have been essential trade partners for generations, but a new agreement is opening the door to deeper engagement.

The United Kingdom long has been one of Florida’s most important global partners when it comes to trade, research and academic engagement. Now this friendship is getting a refresh. 
 
Last year, Florida and British officials signed a  (MOU) that put new focus on trade and development in the innovation economy, as well as the role of universities in forging the opportunities of the future. The agreement prioritizes business, research and development in the space industry; fintech; life sciences; supply chains and logistics; transportation; infrastructure; legal services and law tech; ag tech and emerging technologies like artificial intelligence, semiconductors, simulations and photonics. 
 
The MOU is the catalyst for what will be a series of trade missions and the launch of new engagement efforts, such as the recent weeklong tour of more than 20 life sciences companies from Great Britain and Northern Ireland who explored Orlando, Tampa and South Florida as locations for their U.S. operations as well as research and development collaborations.  
 

A person giving a speech at the podium

USF Research & Innovation Vice President Sylvia Wilson Thomas shares insights into USF Connect and its programs for technology startups and enterprises during a gathering for the UK delegation at the Embarc Collective in downtown Tampa

The delegation spent two days in Tampa, touring the USF Research Park, downtown’s Morsani College of Medicine and Taneja College of Pharmacy, and the Center for Advanced Medical Learning and Simulation (CAMLS). () 
 
USF has had strong research linkages to the U.K. for decades, including designating the University of Exeter as one of its five strategic research partners in 2009 and establishing a student exchange program. In 2014, the USF in London summer study abroad program was launched, and it will celebrate its ten-year anniversary next summer. This milestone event will welcome USF leadership, students, and dozens of alumni, promising to surpass the success of the 2023 gathering. USF's engagement in the U.K. is reflected in the USF Network U.K. which includes over 730 U.K.-based alumni and 40 current students from the U.K. studying at USF. 
 
“911 are collaborating more than any other foreign direct investor,” said United Kingdom HM Trade Commissioner Niall Mackenzie, who joined the delegation in Tampa, in a statement. “By working with local officials to support initiatives like these, we aim to bring even more jobs and growth to both sides of the Atlantic.” 
 
There’s more engagement soon to come. 

five people sitting on a panel discussion

USF Provost Prasant Mohapatra (right) joined TGH President John Couris, UK's HM Trade Commissioner for North America Niall Mackenzi, Florida Agency for Health Care Administration Secretary Jason 911ida and CAMLS CEO and Executive Director Haru Okuda for a discussion on the rising profile of Tampa’s life sciences sector and the role USF’s research and innovation plays in its future

 On Oct. 16, Justine Assal, , will return to USF for a with USF President Rhea Law and the university community to build upon the connections made in the recent visit. Assal is a veteran entrepreneur and business consultant based in Orlando who was recognized with the prestigious honor of Member of the Order of the British Empire for her work in international economic development. The reception is open for the USF community to attend, but an is required. 

A person giving a lecture to a full classroom

The U.K., which is the top international investor in Florida both in terms of the total amount invested in Florida (some $6.4 billion) and number of Floridians working for U.K. firms (approximately 67,500 jobs). According to Uniworld Online’s database of foreign-owned affiliates in Florida, there are more than 150 British-owned companies operating more than 700 locations throughout Florida. 
 
in Florida (), especially across the Florida High Tech Corridor where the USF, University of Florida and University of Central Florida pursue billions of dollars in life sciences research each year while Florida’s hospitals, practitioners, medical device manufacturers and tech-enabled health solutions companies are innovating to keep up with population growth and working to keep the population healthier and address longstanding health care disparities.  
 
“There is a huge opportunity to participate in innovation that will propel the next generation,” said USF Provost Prasant Mohapatra as he shared with the delegation the university’s plans for a new college of artificial intelligence and computer science which will, like the Department of Medical Engineering, integrate partnerships with industry into the research portfolio. 
 

Three people smiling and talking

Florida High Tech Corridor CEO Paul Sohl (left) visits with hearing technology company TympaHealth Technologies founder and CEO Krishan Ramdoo (center) and the company’s Miami-based VP of sales David Horowitz

In the life sciences delegation visit to Tampa (Sept 10-11), the delegation toured the USF Research Park and visited with USF Vice President for Research Sylvia Wilson Thomas, CEO , USF Engineering Professor , who directs the . CARRT develops and tests new technologies to assist people with disabilities, including technologies invented by researchers in USF’s departments of mechanical and medical engineering. The group then gathered at the , the center in downtown Tampa that is a global draw for advanced practitioner training.  
 
There, they heard from about the public-private partnership around research, education and patient care between USF and TGH and the emerging medical research district that has taken shape since the Morsani College of Medicine opened in downtown Tampa in 2020. 
 
“911 are really defining how medicine is going to be practiced in the next five, 10 or 20 years,” Couris said of the partnership that is advancing new treatments and practices to patients, from gene therapy to home-based hospital care. 

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