The Scar Free Foundation is a medical research charity, whose mission is to achieve scar free healing within a generation and transform the lives of those affected by disfiguring conditions. Professor Sir Bruce Keogh, National Medical Director of NHS England, chairs the charity and HRH The Countess of Wessex is its Patron. Founded in 1999 as the Healing Foundation, the charity has to date supported over £20 million of life changing research into wound healing.
Over 4.5 million people in England live with a visible scar. A 2015 BMJ study found that the care and treatment of acute and chronic wounds and scars costs the NHS an estimated £4.5 billion every year (comparable to the treatment of obesity). The benefits of scar free healing are significant. Alongside the impact on trauma, surgery, and complex wounds, understanding the mechanisms of scarring will lead to advances in treating conditions that affect internal organs, like liver cirrhosis and heart disease. The Scar Free Foundation enjoys a close association with the British Armed Forces. Since the charity’s formation the Chief of the Defence Staff has served as Vice President, the Chief of Defence People as a member of the Board of Trustees, and the Surgeon General as a member of the Research Council. The Centre for Conflict Wound Research builds on The Scar Free Foundation’s close partnership with the Royal Centre for Defence Medicine, the University of Birmingham and University Hospitals Birmingham NHS Foundation Trust, with whom the charity has worked since 2012 on a national programme of burns injury research.