Women's reproductive health conditions

Women and Equalities Committee Closed Inquiry
Opened: 25 Jul 2023 Closed: 2 May 2025 Parliament page
A short inquiry looking at women’s reproductive health and the challenges that women face when they are being diagnosed and treated for these conditions. The inquiry considers any disparities that exist in the diagnosis and treatment, and the impact of women’s experiences on their health and lives. Read the terms … Read more
21 Recommendations
30 Conclusions
1 Report
4 Oral sessions
2 Letters
4 Events
Activity timeline 12 events
13 Nov
2024
13 Nov
2024
Formal meeting (oral evidence session) · Room 6, Palace of Westminster
29 Nov
2023
Formal meeting (oral evidence session) · The Wilson Room, Portcullis House
8 Nov
2023
Formal meeting (oral evidence session) · The Macmillan Room, Portcullis House
18 Oct
2023
18 Oct
2023
Formal meeting (oral evidence session) · The Grimond Room, Portcullis House
Oral evidence sessions 4 sessions
Women and Equalities Committee
Dr Sue Mann Professor Dame Lesley Regan
Women's reproductive health; Women and Equalities Committee
Charlotte McArdle · NHS England Dr Judith Richardson · National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) Dr Robin Buckle · Medical Research Council Maria Caulfield MP · Department of Health and Social Care Professor Dame Lesley Regan Professor Hilary Critchley FMedSci · Academy of Medical Sciences Professor Lucy Chappell FMedSci · National Institute of Health and Care Research
Women's reproductive health; Women and Equalities Committee
Dr Anne Connolly MBE · Menstrual Health Coalition Dr Geeta Kumar · Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists (RCOG) Dr Michael Mulholland · Royal College of General Practitioners Janet Lindsay · Wellbeing of Women Professor Sue Carr · General Medical Council (GMC) Rebekah Lloyd · This Independent Life
Women and Equalities Committee
Naga Munchetty Vicky Pattison
Recommendations & Conclusions
51 results
1 Conclusion Accepted
1st Report - Women's reproductive …
High quality reproductive health education vital, welcomed in draft RSHE statutory guidance
High quality education about reproductive health is vital. Educating girls about their periods and the possibility of related conditions at a young age safeguards them against the distress of not understanding what is happening to their bodies and empowers them … Read more
Government Response
The government agrees on the importance of comprehensive menstrual health education and states the Department for Education is reviewing the RSHE statutory guidance, including menstrual and gynaecological health, with consultation results and its response to be published this year.
Government Equalities Office
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2 Recommendation Deferred
1st Report - Women's reproductive …
Revise draft RSHE guidance on menstrual health due to insufficient and late teaching
However, we are concerned that the teaching of the menstrual health element of relationships, sex and health education is insufficient and inconsistent. It is often delivered too late in a child’s development to be of use and by teachers who … Read more
Government Response
The government agrees on the importance of comprehensive menstrual health education, outlining existing RSHE coverage, and states that the Department for Education is currently reviewing the statutory guidance and will consider the recommendations as part of this process, with results published this year.
Government Equalities Office
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3 Recommendation Deferred
1st Report - Women's reproductive …
Ensure RSHE teachers receive training and deliver comprehensive reproductive health education early
The Government should ensure teachers tasked with delivering the menstrual and gynaecological health element of RSHE receive the training necessary to deliver it effectively. Information on women’s reproductive health conditions should be taught early on in secondary education, preferably around … Read more
Government Response
The government deflects the recommendation regarding teacher training for RSHE and curriculum content, instead focusing on the provision of general women's health information via the NHS website and the development of women's health hubs.
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4 Conclusion Deferred
1st Report - Women's reproductive …
Guidance fails to recognise importance of boys and men understanding reproductive health conditions
The guidance fails to recognise the importance of boys and men understanding reproductive health conditions that their peers might experience and their role in changing the culture and stigma that girls face. (Paragraph 26) 72 Publicly available information Read more
Government Response
The government's response focuses on the NHS's digital and social media initiatives to provide information to women and girls on reproductive health, and a competition for women's health innovations, rather than addressing the recommendation about teaching boys and men about female reproductive health conditions.
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5 Conclusion Deferred
1st Report - Women's reproductive …
Specify in statutory guidance that boys must be taught female reproductive health conditions
The statutory guidance should specify that boys should be taught about female reproductive health conditions.
Government Response
The government's response deflects the recommendation to specify teaching boys about female reproductive health in statutory guidance by discussing NHS England's plans for elective care reform, addressing racial biases in healthcare, and professional training for healthcare professionals.
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6 Conclusion Accepted
1st Report - Women's reproductive …
Ongoing NHS website improvements for women's reproductive health information are welcomed
We welcome the ongoing improvements to the NHS website to include information about a wider range of women’s reproductive health conditions, information to specific communities and signposts to support and the ambition to include that information in alternative formats. Read more
Government Response
The government outlined existing plans for reforming elective care, including gynaecology pathways in community diagnostic centres, aiming to meet the 18-week referral-to-treatment standard by March 2029. It also highlighted ongoing Office for National Statistics studies on endometriosis and NHS England's work on developing metrics for timely access and outcomes.
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7 Conclusion Deferred
1st Report - Women's reproductive …
Enhance NHS website and app to be comprehensive, accessible, inclusive, and highly-visible
We know that many women and girls are using online spaces to get information and seek help while there are gaps in support in medical fields. It is therefore imperative that the NHS and trusted sources become a first-port-of-call to … Read more
Government Response
The government focused on the inclusivity aspect, noting RCOG is developing a guideline for trans and gender-diverse adults by 2026, which NHS England encourages but will not actively implement. It mentioned NHS England's existing LGBT+ health programme but did not address the broader recommendation for the NHS website/app to be comprehensive, accessible, and highly-visible.
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8 Recommendation Accepted
1st Report - Women's reproductive …
Improve NHS website with interactive tools, guidelines, accessibility, and mental health support
To supplement improvements in the provision of information on the NHS website, we recommend the inclusion of an interactive tool which can help women to determine whether they might have a reproductive health condition. We further recommend that information on … Read more
Government Response
The government emphasised that healthcare professionals are expected to provide comprehensive information, discuss treatment options, pain relief, and use shared decision-making, citing existing NHS England guidance. It also noted that women's health hubs provide specialist knowledge, but did not commit to any new actions regarding an interactive website tool, specific website content, or commissioning new hubs.
Government Equalities Office
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9 Conclusion Deferred
1st Report - Women's reproductive …
Increase NHS digital and social media presence for reproductive health conditions consistently
With women and girls relying on online spaces and a proliferation of femtech apps to fill gaps in their knowledge of reproductive health conditions, the NHS should increase its own digital and social media presence in relation to reproductive health … Read more
Government Response
The government did not address the recommendation to increase the NHS's digital and social media presence for reproductive health. Instead, it acknowledged poor experiences with procedural pain and committed to NHS England holding a roundtable in spring 2025 to discuss issues, review training, and identify system changes for pain recognition and management.
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10 Conclusion Accepted
1st Report - Women's reproductive …
Medical misogyny and racism lead to dismissed pain in women's reproductive healthcare.
There is a clear lack of awareness and understanding of women’s reproductive health conditions among primary healthcare practitioners, particularly when those conditions occur in young women and girls. Women are finding their symptoms normalised and their pain dismissed, with an … Read more
Government Response
The government agreed on the importance of addressing women’s pain and experiences. It committed that NHS England, with DHSC, will review the potential of conducting the Reproductive Health Survey regularly and that NHS England will review national data collection processes and protocols, including scoping a patient experience measure for women’s health services.
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11 Recommendation Accepted
1st Report - Women's reproductive …
Implement urgent NHS training challenging racial biases to improve reproductive healthcare in primary care.
The NHS needs to urgently implement a training programme to improve the experience of treatment and diagnosis in primary care for women, girls, trans and non-binary people with reproductive ill health. Improving early diagnosis, including through the provision of follow … Read more
Government Response
The government recognises the importance of raising awareness and committing to addressing racial biases, referring to an existing RCGP Women's Health Library with educational resources for primary care professionals. It also points to NHS England's plan to meet 18-week treatment standards by March 2029 for earlier diagnoses.
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12 Conclusion Deferred
1st Report - Women's reproductive …
Establish improved diagnosis times as a key performance indicator for Women's Health Strategy.
Improvements in diagnosis times should be made a key performance indicator for the Women’s Health Strategy for England.
Government Response
The government did not address the recommendation to make improvements in diagnosis times a key performance indicator for the Women’s Health Strategy. Instead, it focused on improving mental healthcare provision for women, committing to recruiting an additional 8,500 mental health workers and detailing existing mental health services.
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13 Conclusion Deferred
1st Report - Women's reproductive …
Implement RCOG inclusive care guidelines throughout healthcare, ensuring practitioner training and monitoring by RCOG.
We support the Royal College for Obstetricians and Gynaecologists’ initiative for a guideline on inclusive care. When finalised it should be implemented throughout the healthcare system and medical practitioners must receive adequate training, with implementation monitored by the RCOG. Read more
Government Response
The government did not address the recommendation regarding the implementation, training, and monitoring of the RCOG guideline on inclusive care. Instead, it focused on the role of women's health hubs in local communities and their potential to commission mental health provision or offer referral pathways.
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14 Conclusion Deferred
1st Report - Women's reproductive …
Healthcare practitioners insufficiently understand reproductive health treatment options and their impact on patients.
Healthcare practitioners lack sufficient understanding of the range and suitability of treatment options available to treat reproductive health conditions. Too often conditions are viewed through the prism of fertility which, while a necessary consideration, should not be the only factor … Read more
Government Response
The government did not address the core recommendation about practitioners' lack of understanding, empathy, and narrow focus on fertility. It instead acknowledged the negative impact of mixed waiting areas and committed that NHS England will publish the findings of the NHS maternity and neonatal estates survey in early 2025.
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15 Conclusion Deferred
1st Report - Women's reproductive …
Mandate NHS practitioners to stay updated and address regional disparities in reproductive health treatments.
The NHS must take steps to ensure healthcare practitioners keep up to date with the full range of diagnostic and treatment options available for reproductive health conditions. Those options, as well as waiting times and potential outcomes of surgical procedures … Read more
Government Response
The government did not address the recommendation for healthcare practitioners to keep up to date on treatment options, communicate these to patients, or address regional disparities. Instead, it focused on the problematic use of the term 'benign gynaecology', committing that NHS England is working with lived experience individuals and will review internal information using this term.
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16 Conclusion Deferred
1st Report - Women's reproductive …
NHS fails patients during routine reproductive procedures, neglecting duty of care and pain management.
The NHS is failing many patients who undergo routine reproductive healthcare procedures such as hysteroscopy, IUD fitting and cervical screening. In too many cases, we find that a duty of care from gynaecologists and other medical practitioners is absent. Women … Read more
Government Response
The government did not directly address the concerns about absent duty of care, patients enduring severe pain, or being ignored/belittled during procedures. Instead, it focused on its commitment to cutting waiting lists and reforming elective care through NHS England's plan to meet the 18-week referral-to-treatment standard by March 2029, and highlighted existing programmes like Getting It Right First Time (GIRFT).
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17 Conclusion Accepted
1st Report - Women's reproductive …
Enforce informed consent and halt painful gynaecological procedures lacking adequate pain relief.
The NHS must do more to monitor and enforce protocols governing procedures such hysteroscopy, IUD fitting and cervical screening and ensure that they are underpinned by informed consent and are trauma-informed. A risk assessment that allows a patient to make … Read more
Government Response
The government commits to NHS England publishing a suite of adult and children's elective performance metrics, long waits, and waiting times data in an accessible format by March 2027. It will also increase the availability of elective, cancer, and outpatient data and expand diagnostic coding in elective care.
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18 Recommendation Deferred
1st Report - Women's reproductive …
Collect NHS data on adherence to guidelines for painful gynaecological procedures and patient experience.
Concerns about painful procedures have been raised for years with little sign of progress. We recommend the NHS collects data on whether guidelines for hysteroscopy, IUD fittings and other potentially painful gynaecological procedures are being adhered to. That data must … Read more
Government Response
The government's response did not address the recommendation about collecting data on adherence to guidelines for painful gynaecological procedures. Instead, it discussed the affordability of period products and prescription charges.
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19 Conclusion Deferred
1st Report - Women's reproductive …
Establish reducing pain in invasive procedures as a key performance indicator for Women's Health Strategy.
Reducing the pain women experience during invasive procedures should be made a key performance indicator for the Women’s Health Strategy for England. (Paragraph 82) 75 Effect on mental health
Government Response
The government's response did not address the recommendation about making pain reduction in invasive procedures a key performance indicator for the Women's Health Strategy. Instead, it discussed mandating gender equality action plans for large employers.
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20 Conclusion Accepted
1st Report - Women's reproductive …
Offer specialist mental health support to individuals with reproductive health conditions from first symptoms through treatment
Individuals with a suspected or diagnosed reproductive health condition should be offered specialist mental health support from when they start to report distressing and/or painful symptoms and throughout diagnosis and treatment. Delays at each step of the process and a … Read more
Government Response
The government highlights existing Sexual Assault Referral Centres (SARCs) providing 24/7 care and enhanced mental health pathways for victims of rape and sexual assault. It states NHS England will review and develop website content for those needing help, and will consider the committee's broader recommendations as the Women’s Health Strategy is taken forward.
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21 Conclusion Deferred
1st Report - Women's reproductive …
Commission women's health hubs to include mental health support in core specification in underserved areas
Women’s health hubs situated in areas where access to appropriate mental health services is lacking should be commissioned to include mental health support as part of their core specification.
Government Response
The government's response focuses on the importance of training for primary care professionals in women's reproductive health and existing resources. It states NHS England is assessing workforce training gaps and scoping future clinical training needs but does not commit to commissioning mental health support as part of women's health hubs.
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22 Conclusion Deferred
1st Report - Women's reproductive …
Implement policies ensuring separate spaces for reproductive health and obstetrics patients during investigations/treatment
NHS England should implement policies to ensure there are separate spaces for patients undergoing investigations or treatment for reproductive health conditions and obstetrics patients. (Paragraph 91) Waiting lists
Government Response
The government's response did not address the recommendation for separate spaces for reproductive health and obstetrics patients. Instead, it discussed the diagnosis of Polycystic Ovary Syndrome (PCOS), including the potential role of AMH blood tests and NICE's planned clinical guideline on PCOS.
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23 Conclusion Deferred
1st Report - Women's reproductive …
Benign gynaecology' terminology downplays reproductive health conditions, risking treatment de-prioritisation
The use of terminology such as ‘benign gynaecology’ downplays the impact of reproductive health conditions and risks de-prioritising them for treatment that could significantly improve patients’ health and lives.
Government Response
The government's response did not address the recommendation to cease using terminology like 'benign gynaecology.' Instead, it focused on primary care professionals' training and appraisal processes, and how patient satisfaction is captured through the GP Patient Survey.
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24 Conclusion Rejected
1st Report - Women's reproductive …
Cease using 'benign' and reprioritise chronic reproductive conditions like endometriosis for surgical treatment
NHS England should cease to use the term benign in relation to reproductive ill health. The NHS should work with stakeholders to develop a way to describe these conditions that more accurately reflects the serious impact they can have on … Read more
Government Response
The government recognizes the importance of training in women's reproductive health but states NHS England will not collect data on primary care practitioners' training hours due to burdens and logistical challenges. The recommendation about terminology and prioritisation for chronic conditions remains unaddressed.
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25 Conclusion Deferred
1st Report - Women's reproductive …
Prioritise longest elective surgery waiting lists and provide financial support for women's travel
Measures to reduce waiting lists for elective surgery should prioritise areas where waiting lists are longest and disparities greatest. The NHS should provide financial support to women to allow them to travel further to access care earlier.
Government Response
The government's response did not address the recommendation to prioritise waiting list reduction or provide financial support for women to travel for earlier care. Instead, it focused on the training and curricula of medical professionals, noting that women's health is included in GMC, RCGP, and RCOG training standards.
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26 Conclusion Acknowledged
1st Report - Women's reproductive …
Collect comprehensive data on reproductive health delays, referrals, and treatment outcomes to address inequalities
Data and analysis must improve. The NHS should collect data on where there are delays in the system, where women are being referred from, which could highlight areas where community provision is lacking, which groups of women are most affected … Read more
Government Response
The government commits to reviewing and updating existing e-learning training packages for primary care practitioners to promote opportunistic reproductive healthcare during routine contacts like the 6-8 week maternal postnatal check. It will also consider what else can be done to maximise routine contact points but does not commit to collecting the specific data points requested to improve analysis of delays and inequalities.
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27 Conclusion Deferred
1st Report - Women's reproductive …
Existing period and incontinence product schemes are inadequate, financially disadvantaging women and girls
More than half of the population will experience menstruation yet women and girls are financially disadvantaged by having to pay for essential products without which they cannot leave their homes, work or attend education. This is an unfair burden, not … Read more
Government Response
The government's response focused on the work of NICE in developing clinical guidelines for reproductive health conditions and its process for prioritising new guidance topics. It did not address the recommendation for reviewing period and incontinence product schemes or considering free provision of products.
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28 Recommendation Deferred
1st Report - Women's reproductive …
Review period/incontinence schemes and provide free products for vulnerable groups, including via prescription
The Government should review existing period and incontinence product schemes alongside the burden of need. We recommend the Government considers the merits of legislating for free provision for particular groups such as children, students, people seeking asylum and those in … Read more
Government Response
The government response outlined its commitment to a neighbourhood health service and the development of women's health hubs, noting 80 of 88 planned hubs are operational. It did not address the recommendation to review period and incontinence product schemes or consider free provision and prescriptions.
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29 Conclusion Deferred
1st Report - Women's reproductive …
Incentivise workplaces to adopt strategies supporting women with reproductive ill health, including flexible working
Workplaces must be incentivised by the Government to have strategies in place to support women experiencing reproductive ill health. The availability of flexible working patterns, a workplace that provides easy access to period products, and time off to attend appointments … Read more
Government Response
The government response detailed efforts to tailor women's health hubs to local populations and outlined NHS England's development of an equity framework to reduce inequalities, focusing on menopause and heavy menstrual bleeding. It did not address workplace incentives, support strategies for reproductive ill health, or the Employment Rights Bill.
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30 Conclusion Deferred
1st Report - Women's reproductive …
Amend Employment Rights Bill Clause 26 to define reproductive health support as advancing gender equality.
Clause 26 of the Employment Rights Bill should be amended to make clear that supporting women with reproductive health conditions falls under the definition of advancing gender equality. (Paragraph 111) 77 Violence against women and girls
Government Response
The government response highlighted the role of long-acting reversible contraception (LARC) in women's reproductive health and stated it will consider LARC fee structures and work to understand training issues. It did not address the recommendation to amend Clause 26 of the Employment Rights Bill.
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31 Conclusion Acknowledged
1st Report - Women's reproductive …
Incorporate support for women and children conceived through rape into the Women's Health Strategy.
The Government’s plans for the Women’s Health Strategy for England should include support and guidance for women who have conceived as a result of rape, and for children born as a result of rape. This should include tailored information on … Read more
Government Response
The government stated it is working to take forward the Women's Health Strategy for England and will 'take into account' the committee’s recommendations on specific areas of focus, including this one, as part of that ongoing work.
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32 Recommendation Deferred
1st Report - Women's reproductive …
Set out plans to improve primary care practitioners' training in women’s reproductive health conditions.
The Department of Health and Social Care should set out plans to improve the accessibility and take up of professional development in women’s reproductive health conditions among practitioners in primary care. Those plans should include allocating increased funding for training … Read more
Government Response
The government detailed its commitment to funding research into women’s reproductive health conditions through NIHR and UKRI, highlighting initiatives to increase investment and support academic training in this field. It did not outline plans for improving professional development or funding for primary care practitioners' training.
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33 Conclusion Acknowledged
1st Report - Women's reproductive …
Evaluate merits of nationally rolling out the anti-mullarian hormone blood test for PCOS diagnosis.
The approval of the anti-mullarian hormone blood test as another tool to assist in the diagnosis of polycycstic ovary syndrome is a welcome development. NHS England should evaluate the merits of rolling it out nationally as a matter of priority.
Government Response
The government stated it is working to take forward the Women’s Health Strategy for England and will consider the committee's recommendations on topics and key indicators, including the evaluation of the anti-mullarian hormone blood test, as part of this ongoing work.
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34 Conclusion Deferred
1st Report - Women's reproductive …
GPs struggle to diagnose complex reproductive health conditions due to systemic pressures.
GPs face difficulties diagnosing complicated reproductive healthcare conditions which may present with a variety of symptoms. They face workplace pressures, have short consultation times, and can struggle to access training and guidance. While it is positive to see that medical … Read more
Government Response
The government acknowledged the importance of early intervention and referred to NHS England’s plan to reform elective care and meet the 18-week referral-to-treatment standard by March 2029, which aims for earlier diagnoses and treatment. It did not commit to further work on specific professional standards for GPs.
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35 Recommendation Rejected
1st Report - Women's reproductive …
Strengthen annual GP appraisal with performance indicator on women's reproductive health diagnosis and treatment.
The annual GP appraisal process should be strengthened to include a specific performance indicator on the diagnosis and treatment of women’s reproductive health conditions, including intersectional considerations. That indicator should include patient experience. Read more
Government Response
The government rejects adding specific performance indicators for women's reproductive health to GP appraisals, explaining that such indicators are not part of the system, but notes that patient experience is already captured through 360-degree reviews and the GP Patient Survey.
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36 Recommendation Rejected
1st Report - Women's reproductive …
Collect annual data on primary care practitioners' training hours in women’s reproductive health.
NHS Digital should collect data on how many hours of training primary care practitioners undergo annually in the field of women’s reproductive health. (Paragraph 131) Medical education
Government Response
The government rejects the recommendation for NHS Digital to collect data on training hours for primary care practitioners, citing burdens, potential overlap with regulators, and logistical challenges, and refers to existing CPD and appraisal processes.
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37 Recommendation Accepted
1st Report - Women's reproductive …
Medical schools provide insufficient training on women’s reproductive health, impacting practitioner knowledge.
Training on women’s reproductive health in medical schools needs to be improved. Healthcare practitioners are graduating without sufficient knowledge of the conditions that may affect women over their lifetime . 78 Without that education, healthcare professionals are less likely to … Read more
Government Response
The government acknowledges the importance of training and describes existing measures, such as GMC standards, the new MLA assessment topics (including women's health), and mandatory obstetrics and gynaecology rotations, as already addressing the need for improved education.
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38 Recommendation Deferred
1st Report - Women's reproductive …
Improve undergraduate women's health teaching and incentivise specialisation in reproductive healthcare.
The Government should work with the RCOG, RCGP and the GMC to improve the teaching of women’s health at undergraduate level and ensure it is an integral part of medical education for all those seeking a career in healthcare. As … Read more
Government Response
The government states the GMC, an independent body, is responsible for setting medical standards and curricula, noting that the GMC's new MLA includes women's health topics. It clarifies that obstetrics and gynaecology is already a mandatory undergraduate rotation, and does not address the recommendation to consider new incentives.
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39 Recommendation Accepted
1st Report - Women's reproductive …
Train primary care practitioners to identify hidden reproductive health concerns during routine interactions.
Primary care practitioners should be trained to use women’s common interactions with the healthcare system, such as cervical screening appointments, ante- and post-natal care checks and visits to STI clinics, as an opportunity to pick up hidden health concerns relating … Read more
Government Response
The government accepts the recommendation, stating work is underway and committing to holding webinars for primary care practitioners, reviewing and updating existing e-learning packages, and referencing 2023 guidance on postnatal checks and the role of women’s health hubs.
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40 Recommendation Accepted in Part
1st Report - Women's reproductive …
Commission NICE to develop and disseminate comprehensive guidelines for all reproductive health conditions, monitoring adherence.
The Department of Health and Social Care and NHS England should commission NICE to develop comprehensive guidelines for all reproductive health conditions. Those guidelines should be communicated to GPs and made accessible to patients through the NHS website to allow … Read more
Government Response
The government accepts that reproductive health is a priority for guidelines and notes NICE already has an extensive portfolio and is developing new guidance, but states NICE cannot commit to developing comprehensive guidelines for all conditions due to limited capacity and its prioritisation framework.
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41 Conclusion Not Addressed
1st Report - Women's reproductive …
Women's health hub model shows promise but faces systemic challenges and risks unequal access.
The expansion of the women’s health hub model has the potential to be a positive step towards providing the joined-up care and commissioning needed to effectively support women experiencing reproductive health conditions. However, the women’s health hub model exists within … Read more
Government Response
The government highlights its commitment to neighbourhood health services and the positive impact and cost-benefit of women's health hubs, noting ICBs are responsible for commissioning these services. It does not directly address the committee's concerns about systemic problems or risks to underserved areas.
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42 Recommendation Not Addressed
1st Report - Women's reproductive …
Women's health hubs require national evaluation to ensure benefits and multi-service provision.
It is positive to hear that many of the leaders in the ICBs are focusing their hubs on disadvantaged groups. While local ownership, management and decentralisation of the hubs is important to meet local needs, regular national-level evaluations are also … Read more
Government Response
The government reiterates its commitment to neighbourhood health services and the positive impacts of women's health hubs, noting that ICBs are responsible for commissioning and are encouraged to provide multiple services. It does not commit to national-level evaluations.
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43 Recommendation Deferred
1st Report - Women's reproductive …
Allocate long-term, ring-fenced funding and resources to embed and develop the women's health hub model.
We find that women’s health hubs have proven the concept that they can deliver improvements to women’s healthcare. The Government must now allocate long-term, ring-fenced funding and resource to embed the hub model and further support its development. That development … Read more
Government Response
The government expresses commitment to local health services and acknowledges the positive impact of women's health hubs. However, it states that Integrated Care Boards (ICBs) are responsible for commissioning and funding these services, and the core specification encourages ICBs to consider providing ultrasound facilities.
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44 Recommendation Acknowledged
1st Report - Women's reproductive …
Ensure women's health hubs meet specific demographic needs, accounting for religious and cultural considerations.
Integrated care boards must ensure that their hubs meet the specific demographic needs of their populations, particularly accounting for religious and cultural considerations.
Government Response
The government agrees that hubs must be tailored to local needs and highlights that NHS England is developing an equity framework for ICBs, which hubs are likely to implement. It also notes existing legal duties and programmes for reducing health inequalities.
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45 Conclusion Acknowledged
1st Report - Women's reproductive …
Postcode lottery in primary care access to long-acting reversible contraception creates delays and burdens.
There remains a postcode lottery of access in primary care to long-acting reversible contraception. As a result, some women are having to seek care from secondary or community services, leading to delays in treatment and an unnecessary burden on secondary … Read more
Government Response
The government acknowledges the vital role of GPs in LARC provision and states it will consider fee structures and announce future funding allocations in due course, while continuing to work with partners to understand training issues.
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46 Recommendation Acknowledged
1st Report - Women's reproductive …
Develop funding and training strategy to address insufficient LARC provision in general practice.
The Government should develop a funding and training strategy to address the lack of LARC provision in general practice, particularly in those areas not covered by a women’s health hub. This should include an assessment of whether the current fee … Read more
Government Response
The government acknowledges the vital role of GPs in LARC provision and states it will consider the fee structures for LARC. It also notes that it continues to work with partners to understand training issues, and future funding allocations will be announced later.
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47 Conclusion Accepted
1st Report - Women's reproductive …
Research into women's reproductive health conditions remains insufficient due to inadequate prioritisation and incentives.
Finding the causes of women’s reproductive health conditions and new and better diagnostic tools and treatments for them cannot happen without sufficient research, which includes all groups of women and others affected, at different life stages. Yet research remains lacking … Read more
Government Response
The government fully recognises the importance of funding and building research capacity in women's reproductive health, detailing how NIHR and UKRI fund research and stating that NIHR has invested approximately £258 million over the last five years, a 55% increase. It also highlights the launch of a new £3 million Policy Research Unit.
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48 Recommendation Deferred
1st Report - Women's reproductive …
Update Women's Health Strategy to prioritise specific conditions and reduce endometriosis diagnosis waiting times.
The Women’s Health Strategy for England should be updated to include priorities for specific, common conditions. We recommend the Government commits to reducing waiting times for an endometriosis diagnosis to less than two years by the end of this Parliament … Read more
Government Response
The government recognises the impact of long wait times for gynaecological conditions and states it is working on taking forward the Women's Health Strategy, considering the committee's recommendations on specific areas of focus. It also refers to previous responses on measuring improvements in diagnosis times.
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49 Recommendation Accepted
1st Report - Women's reproductive …
Allocate increased ringfenced funding for research into women’s reproductive health and boost clinical academia interest.
The Government should allocate increased, ringfenced funding to support research into the causes, diagnosis and treatment of women’s reproductive health conditions. While increased funding will in itself attract more researchers to this area, NHS England and research bodies should also … Read more
Government Response
The government recognises the importance of funding and building research capacity in women's reproductive health, detailing how NIHR and UKRI fund research through open competition and training awards. It highlights existing initiatives and examples of current funding, but does not commit to new ringfenced funding.
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50 Recommendation Deferred
1st Report - Women's reproductive …
Publish an implementation plan for the Women’s Health Strategy detailing timelines, costs, and resources.
The Government should publish an implementation plan for the Women’s Health Strategy for England detailing timelines, costs and resource. (Paragraph 184) Funding
Government Response
The government is working with NHS England and the Women’s Health Ambassador on how to take forward the Women's Health Strategy and will consider the committee's recommendations for inclusion and indicators as this work progresses.
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51 Recommendation Deferred
1st Report - Women's reproductive …
Provide additional funding for early diagnosis and treatment of women’s reproductive health conditions.
We call on the Government to recognise the financial benefits of increased investment in early diagnosis and treatment of women’s reproductive health conditions and provide the additional funding necessary to truly transform the support available to the millions of women … Read more
Government Response
The government recognises the importance of early intervention and refers to an existing NHS plan to reform elective care and meet treatment standards by March 2029 for earlier diagnoses. Information on future funding allocations will be announced later.
Government Equalities Office
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Government Response AI assessment · 51 of 21 classified

Total 21 recs + 30 conclusions
Correspondence 2 letters
31 Jan 2024 Correspondence from the Parliamentary Under Secretary of State, Department of Health and Social Care, relating to Women's reproductive health, dated 24 Jan 2024
Parliament page
10 Jan 2024 Correspondence from Deputy Chief Nursing Officer, NHS England, relating to Women's reproductive health, dated 13 December 2023
Parliament page