As part of the France 2030 plan, Stéphanie Rist, Minister of Health, Families, Autonomy and Disabled People, announces the launch of a call for projects to promote the integration of mature innovations in healthcare institutions by mobilizing the lever of public procurement.
France has a dynamic ecosystem of health innovations with technological, organizational or hybrid solutions that are already mature, available on the market and ready to be deployed. However, their large-scale adoption in healthcare institutions can be hampered by several factors: financial constraints, uncertainties about the use value, complexity of public procurement procedures or lack of comparable feedback.
In a logic of experimentation, the State is launching the France 2030 call for projects “Innovative public procurement within health establishments”, complementary to other innovation support schemes. It aims to mobilise public procurement as a lever for accelerating the dissemination of innovations.
It will allow healthcare institutions to test already mature innovations and assess their relevance and potential for adoption, while producing tangible evidence of their effectiveness in real conditions of use and thus removing the obstacles to their large-scale deployment. The challenge? To sustainably transform practices to improve the quality of care, optimize the working conditions of professionals, and support the ecological transition of establishments.
Several million euros to deploy innovations in healthcare facilities
The “Innovative Public Procurement in Health Establishments” scheme has a total budget of several million euros from France 2030 and its implementation is entrusted by the State to the Health Innovation Agency (AIS), the General Directorate for Healthcare Supply (DGOS), and the National Agency for the Support of the Performance of Health and Medico-Social Establishments (ANAP). which will ensure the selection and monitoring of the selected projects, through ante- and post-deployment evaluations to objectify the benefits.
It targets solutions that are already mature and available on the market but have been little or not deployed and meet concrete needs identified by the institution in at least one of the five priority areas identified: organizational innovation in support and HR functions, patient pathway and coordination, operating room, diagnosis and clinic, ecological transition. These solutions are marketed by innovative companies, start-ups, or SMEs, owners or distributors of the solution.
This call for projects is intended for public or private health or medico-social establishments, as well as groups of establishments, with projects with a minimum budget of €150,000 and a duration of 12 to 24 months. The winners will be selected by experts according to various criteria: technical maturity of the solution to be deployed, potential for replicability on a national scale, and ability to demonstrate measurable impacts on the quality of care, working conditions or environmental sustainability.
Applications will be open in three successive waves over three years. The first wave starts today with applications closing on June 30, 2026 at midnight.
Innovation must become a vector for transforming practices: this is the vision I have for our health and medico-social system, and for our caregivers. We are mobilizing France 2030 to support the dissemination of innovations in health and medico-social establishments. It is also a major lever for economic development for our innovative companies, for which public procurement must make it possible to support the first deployments.Stéphanie Rist, Minister of Health, Families, Autonomy and Disabled People
“We are mobilized to remove the obstacles to the dissemination of health innovations that have an impact. With this call for projects, we are continuing our work to promote public procurement as a strategic function for the benefit of the performance of healthcare institutions and the development of innovative companies,” Bruno Bonnell, Secretary General for Investment, in charge of France 2030.
“Assessing, supporting professionals and identifying levers that can be generalised at the national level: Anap will put its expertise at the service of this call for projects to support innovation in health and further strengthen the overall performance of health and medico-social establishments.” Stéphane Pardoux, Director General of Anap.
About the France 2030 investment plan
Reflects a twofold ambition: to sustainably transform key sectors of our economy (health, energy, automotive, aeronautics and space) through technological innovation, and to position France not only as a player, but as a leader in the world of tomorrow.
From fundamental research, to the emergence of an idea to the production of a new product or service, France 2030 supports the entire life cycle of innovation until its industrialization. Is unprecedented in its scale and ambitious objectives: €54 billion will be invested to ensure that our companies, universities and research organisations are fully successful in their transitions in these strategic sectors.
The challenge: to enable them to respond competitively to the ecological and attractiveness challenges of the world of the future, and to bring out the future leaders of our sectors of excellence.
France 2030 is defined by two cross-cutting objectives consisting of devoting 50% of its expenditure to the decarbonisation of the economy, and 50% to emerging players who drive innovation, and by a principle of systematic exclusion of projects that would be unfavourable to the environment (in the sense of the Do No Significant Harm principle). Is implemented collectively: designed and deployed in consultation with economic, academic, local and European actors to determine the strategic orientations and flagship actions.
Project leaders are invited to submit their application via open, demanding and selective procedures to benefit from the support of the State. Is managed by the General Secretariat for Investment on behalf of the Prime Minister and implemented by the Agency for Ecological Transition (ADEME), the National Research Agency (ANR), Bpifrance and the Banque des Territoires.
15.04.2026.




