Want better results? Start with health equity
July 15, 2025Post Title
In this blog, Programme Director Catherine Dale explores how designing digital technology with a focus on health inequalities not only supports vulnerable communities but also enhances the likelihood of success by aligning with the goals of the NHS 10-Year Plan.
A great starting point for any innovator is: Am I building for everyone?
Before COVID-19, health inequality wasn’t widely discussed, even though many people were already experiencing its effects. The pandemic, however, brought the issue into sharp focus.
During the early months of the COVID-19 pandemic, a disturbing pattern emerged.
Studies show that people from Black, Asian, and minority ethnic backgrounds were up to 50% more likely to die from the virus than white British people. And these weren’t necessarily people from low-income backgrounds. Often, they were highly educated doctors and nurses.
At the same time, the murder of George Floyd reignited global conversations about racial justice. In the UK, this twin impact of COVID and racial reckoning forced the NHS and wider society to confront long-standing health inequalities that could no longer be ignored.
Healthcare inequalities: A complex, multi-layered challenge
When we talk about healthcare inequalities, we’re not just talking about the obvious gaps such as who can access care. We’re talking about outcomes including who gets sick more often, who dies earlier, who waits longer for help, and who gets left behind entirely.
Inequity erodes trust in healthcare staff, providers and institutions.
If people have experienced discrimination within public services, they may start from a place of distrust. And if they’ve had poor experiences in the past, they’re less likely to access help in the future which creates a vicious cycle.
There’s also an economic case to tackle this: when health outcomes are worse for certain groups, it costs individuals and the system more. The burden of poor health weighs heavily on society, especially when it could have been prevented.
Protected characteristics and legal protections
We are legally protected from discrimination by the Equality Act 2010 at work, in education, as a consumer and when using public services. The protected characteristics are:
- Disability;
- Age;
- Sexual orientation;
- Gender and gender reassignment;
- Race;
- Religion or belief;
- Pregnancy and maternity;
- Marital or civil partnership status;
- Sex.
These legal categories form the foundation of anti-discrimination protections but when we talk about health inequalities we must go further.
Marginalised groups
Some people face exclusion that isn’t fully captured by these protected characteristics.
Inclusion health is about deliberately reaching out to groups who are often overlooked in healthcare design and delivery.
These groups include:
- Those experiencing homelessness;
- Vulnerable migrants, Gypsy, Roma and Traveller communities;
- Those living on a low income;
- Those with poor literacy or health literacy;
- Other marginalised groups.
These individuals often fall through the cracks - not because they’re not protected in theory, but because services weren’t built with them in mind. That’s a critical failure, and one we can address as innovators.
The NHS Core20PLUS5 Framework
So how do we move from awareness to action?
The NHS developed the Core20PLUS5 approach which is a targeted framework for reducing health inequalities. It’s practical, data-informed, and grounded in improvement methodology.
- Core20 refers to the most deprived 20% of the population based on the Index of Multiple Deprivation;
- PLUS focuses on additional groups who are experiencing worse outcomes in specific geographies;
- 5 represents five clinical areas where the evidence shows the biggest health inequalities.
In mental health, one key focus is ensuring annual physical health checks for people with severe mental illness. Others include maternity care, chronic respiratory disease, early cancer diagnosis, managing hypertension and a cross-cutting intervention on smoking cessation.
This framework offers a way in for innovators because if your solution addresses one of these areas or groups, it’s immediately aligned with a system-wide priority.
The Marmot Review and social determinants of health
Much of our current understanding of health inequalities comes from the Marmot Review, which examined the social determinants of health - the conditions in which people are born, grow, live, work, and age.
Published in 2010, and updated in 2020, it showed that not only were health inequalities growing, but for the first time in 100 years, life expectancy had stalled and even declined for the poorest women.
Health is shaped by far more than just access to medicine. Poverty, insecure housing, adverse childhood experiences, stigma, and poor public service experiences all contribute. And while we may not control those factors, we do control the design and delivery of the services we create.
Patient safety and health inequalities
It’s increasingly recognised that health inequalities are a patient safety issue. If someone is more likely to experience harm because of who they are or how they access services, then that’s not just a systems failure, it’s a safety failure.
The Patient Safety and Healthcare Inequalities Reduction Framework helps reframe this problem: if inequalities lead to avoidable harm, they must be tackled as part of improving safety.
Innovation in mental health: case studies
Many PTSD treatments focus on ex-military personnel, often using exposure therapy to recreate past events. But civilian PTSD also requires tailored solutions.
One company addressing this gap is Propeer Solutions Ltd, which is developing an inclusive, low-cost VR app for use in community mental healthcare settings.
In collaboration with Paul Best at Queen’s University Belfast, they’ve created VR Photoscan, a tool that recreates trauma-related environments. One patient described it as offering a “more visceral exposure experience,” helping them prepare for real-life site visits after a city centre attack.
However, innovator Dominique Vyborna of Empress Immersive Ltd has found that exposure therapy isn’t effective for everyone, particularly young women and people from racially minoritised backgrounds.
To address this, she is co-creating a culturally relevant, affordable alternative by working with young women (16–24), neurodivergent individuals, and people from the global majority to design a solution that meets their needs - especially those facing long NHS waitlists.
These are brilliant examples of what’s possible when we rethink who our typical patient could be.
10-year Plan commitments on health inequalities
The 10-year Plan places tackling health inequalities at its core saying these 'persistent disparities’ will be tackled in both access and outcomes to give everyone, no matter who they are or where they come from, the means to engage with the NHS on their own terms.
The government plans to:
- Redirect around £2.2 billion, previously used for NHS deficits, toward working class, rural and coastal regions with the poorest health outcomes;
- Launch over 40 integrated neighbourhood teams (GPs, nurses, social workers) from September 2025 in the areas most in need;
- Asking Integrated Care Boards to meet clear targets on reducing inequalities in outcomes and access based on findings such as Black women are nearly three times more likely to die in childbirth;
- Reallocate care from hospitals to communities to tackle lifestyle risks like smoking, obesity, poor diet, and alcohol use plus funding for early-years services.
Data, dialogue, and partnerships
If you’re trying to develop an innovation that addresses health inequalities, don’t start from assumptions, start with data.
- Look at the public data available from your local Integrated Care Board (ICB) or local authority - Joint Strategic Needs Assessments are a good place to start;
- Talk to voluntary sector organisations as they often have the strongest relationships with marginalised communities;
- Work with people with lived experience as co-designers.
Innovation as a force for equity
There’s a clear message from the current government: we can’t talk about disparities without acknowledging injustice. Wes Streeting recently said, “These are not disparities that dropped from the sky - they are rooted in injustice, and we must attack the root causes.”
That’s where we come in.
As digital innovators we have an unprecedented opportunity to make a difference. And in doing so, we can make innovation not only smart but just.
So, as you design your next tool, app, or intervention, ask yourself:
- Who is this for?
- Who is missing?
- How could this be used to reach those who've been left out?
This isn’t about ticking boxes - it’s about creating real impact.
Resources
NHS England – Core20PLUS5 and The Equality and Health Inequalities Hub
Race and Health Observatory – raceandhealth.org
The King's Fund – What are health inequalities?
Institute of Health Equity - Marmot Review
Race and health observatory - https://nhsrho.org/
The Health Foundation – Health inequalities and trends
Royal College of Psychiatrists – Health inequalities briefing pack
UK Government - Positive action in the workplace - GOV.UK
Royal Society for Public Health - Coronavirus deaths by ethnicity
Government legislation - Equality Act 2010
About the author
Catherine is the Programme Director for Patient Safety at the HIN.
Catherine has 25 years’ experience in the NHS in London, with more than 20 years in quality improvement and transformation roles, including leading the national learning network for Covid Oximetry @home and virtual wards.
Catherine has a master’s in business psychology, is a certified Institute for Healthcare Improvement Coach and an expert on co-designing improvements with patients and applying behavioural insights to healthcare.
Catherine is also a Trustee at the Point of Care Foundation and has helped develop their Experience-Based Co-Design toolkit.
In 2017 she taught on the IHI’s inaugural Co-design College in Boston, USA.
Catherine is an active advocate for tackling health inequalities through improvement and organisational change. She co-led the HIN’s anti-racism programme - a journey to becoming an actively anti-racist organisation.
Catherine was a Labour Councillor in the London Borough of Southwark from 2014–2018.