Orthopaedic Trauma Society
Research
Led by Caroline Hing.
We work with new investigators. Getting started in research can seem a daunting prospect. Our team will support new investigators through project construction and onwards development. Having a good idea is often the hardest part! We can help with the rest.
We work with patients. Increasingly our studies are designed closely with patients. Through our recent experience with the James Lind Alliance Priority Setting Partnerships we are well placed to ensure that future projects deliver on clinical issues that matter to patients.
We partner with funders. We have dedicated funds through the OTS. In addition, we are represented on other funding bodies and our team are experienced in the often confusing landscape of research funding. This assistance, especially to more junior applicants can be of great help when looking for funding to carry out a project.
We support trainers and trainees. The Orthopaedic Research Community is strongly represented and supported by the trainee body. There is a long track record of trainee initiated and delivered studies and we wish to support these to the best of our ability. Senior trainees are represented and work with us specifically to foster and strengthen these links.
Research resource links
UK Specialist society research links
International specialist society research links
NIHR
Clinical Trial Units
Clinical trials Units (CTUs) offer educational courses as well as support for developing future national trials and help with the design and implementation of studies through to application for NIHR grants. CTUs offer support through the entire trial’s life cycle. Exeter and Nottingham CTUs are supported by grants awarded by the BOA. CTUs cover regional areas with support provided across different specialities and access to statisticians and health economists.
OTS supported research outputs
Active Trials (Recruiting or in Set-up)
Supported by our active sub-committee members;
What does it mean for members?
Our membership enjoys a unique ability to improve awareness of trauma management through access by application to national datasets such as the Trauma Audit Research Network and National Hip Fracture Database. Such relationships have been built over time at both policy and research level with this institution and others. We as a group have published from such datasets which are only one part of the research effort within the society.
Portfolio trials in trauma have been driven inexorably by our members to a point where UK orthopaedic trauma research leads the global effort in seeking answers to the questions that matter most to ourselves and our patients. Successful recruitment to large scale trials is well established in UK orthopaedic trauma as a result and is in many ways the raison d’etre of our work.
Always a highlight of the annual meeting, the NIHR OTS Musculoskeletal Trauma Trials Day bring the Society’s membership together with researchers and research associates each year. The Dragon’s Den part of the congress affords a unique opportunity for those with research proposals to get the backing of the Society and the benefit of the input of some of the world’s foremost Clinical Trials Units.
Learn more about the 2026 Conference