Navenio makes it easier for NHS organisations to trial and adopt its real-time location technology
Navenio has been added to the NHS Supply Chain Master Indemnity Agreement (MIA) register, simplifying how NHS organisations can evaluate and deploy its technology.
For many NHS teams, the challenge in adopting new solutions is not identifying value but navigating procurement and trial processes. The MIA framework removes the need for separate indemnity agreements during evaluations, allowing trusts to move more quickly from interest to real-world testing.
This is particularly relevant as healthcare providers look to improve operational efficiency, patient flow and workforce productivity. These challenges require more than traditional systems, they depend on real-time insight into how people and resources move through complex environments.
Navenio’s technology addresses this directly. Originally developed from research at the University of Oxford, it uses infrastructure-free indoor positioning to deliver accurate, real-time tracking through standard smartphones, without the need for additional hardware such as beacons or sensors. This allows organisations to deploy quickly and scale without significant upfront investment.
The platform combines location intelligence with workflow orchestration, providing visibility of staff movement, task allocation and operational bottlenecks. By understanding where people are and how work is progressing in real time, healthcare teams can optimise processes, reduce delays and make better use of existing resources.
Because the system is designed to work with devices already in use, it can be introduced with minimal disruption, making it well suited to live NHS environments where change must be carefully managed.
Being included on the MIA register supports this approach. It provides NHS organisations with a straightforward route to trial Navenio’s technology in practice, helping them assess its impact on efficiency, responsiveness and patient experience before making longer-term decisions.
Niki Trigoni, CEO at Navenio, said: “Healthcare organisations are under increasing pressure to do more with the resources they already have. Our focus is on providing real-time insight that helps teams work more efficiently without adding complexity. Being on the MIA register makes it easier for NHS organisations to test that in practice and see the operational benefits first-hand.”
Organisations interested in trialling Navenio’s platform can get in touch to arrange a demonstration or evaluation.