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First Women's Health Strategy for England to tackle gender health gap


Women and girls across England will benefit from improved healthcare following the publication of the first ever government-led Women’s Health Strategy for England today.

Following a call for evidence which generated almost 100,000 responses from individuals across England, and building on 'Our Vision for Women’s Health', the strategy sets bold ambitions to tackle deep-rooted, systemic issues within the health and care system to improve the health and wellbeing of women, and reset how the health and care system listens to women.

The strategy includes key commitments around:

  • New research and data gathering.
  • The expansion of women’s health-focused education and training for incoming doctors.
  • Improvements to fertility services.
  • Ensuring women have access to high-quality health information.
  • Updating guidance for female-specific health conditions like endometriosis to ensure the latest evidence and advice is being used in treatment.

To support progress already underway in these areas, the strategy aims to:

  • Provide a new investment of £10 million for a breast screening programme, which will provide 25 new mobile breast screening units to be targeted at areas with the greatest challenges in uptake and coverage. This will:
  • - provide extra capacity for services to recover from the impact of the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic
  • - boost uptake of screening in areas where attendance is low
  • - tackle health disparities
  • - contribute towards higher early diagnosis rates in line with the NHS Long Term Plan.
  • Remove additional barriers to IVF for female same-sex couples. There will no longer be a requirement for them to pay for artificial insemination to prove their fertility status and NHS treatment for female same-sex couples will start with 6 cycles of artificial insemination, prior to accessing IVF services, if necessary.
  • Improve transparency on provision and availability of IVF so prospective parents can see how their local area performs to tackle the ‘postcode lottery’ in access to IVF treatment
  • Recognise parents who have lost a child before 24 weeks through the introduction of a pregnancy loss certificate in England.
  • Ensure specialist endometriosis services have the most up-to-date evidence and advice by updating the service specification for severe endometriosis, which defines the standards of care patients can expect. This sits alongside the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) review of its guideline on endometriosis.

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Source: Gov.UK, 20 July 2022

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