Overview of England's Latest Rare Diseases Strategy
The England Rare Diseases Action Plan 2026 marks a pivotal moment in the nation's approach to tackling rare conditions, serving as the final annual plan under the UK Rare Diseases Framework 2021-2026, now extended to January 2027. Published on February 27, 2026, by the Department of Health and Social Care (DHSC), this comprehensive document details progress across 40 actions spanning four core priorities: accelerating diagnosis, enhancing healthcare professional awareness, improving care coordination, and expanding access to specialist treatments. With rare diseases affecting 1 in 17 people over their lifetime in the UK, the plan emphasizes genomics, data-driven research, and health equity, aligning closely with the government's 10 Year Health Plan for a shift toward prevention and digital innovation.
Stakeholders, including patient groups like Genetic Alliance UK and industry bodies such as the Association of the British Pharmaceutical Industry (ABPI), have welcomed the recognition of rare diseases as a formal health inequality. This new commitment, Action 40, integrates rare conditions into NHS England's Core20PLUS5 framework from 2026-2028, aiming to address diagnostic delays and unequal treatment access disproportionately impacting underserved communities.
Understanding Rare Diseases: Prevalence and Challenges
Rare diseases, defined as conditions affecting fewer than 1 in 2,000 people, encompass over 7,000 distinct disorders, many genetic in origin. In England, their collective burden is significant, with long diagnostic odysseys—often spanning years—leading to delayed interventions, higher costs, and poorer outcomes. The plan highlights how only 5% of rare diseases have approved treatments, underscoring the urgency for research acceleration.
Key statistics reveal the scale: the NHS Genomic Medicine Service (GMS) delivered over 340,000 genomic tests for rare diseases in 2025 alone, including more than 40,000 whole genome sequences. Around 40% of rapid whole genome sequencing for acutely ill children yields actionable diagnoses, transforming care for families. Previous action plans have laid groundwork, with 28 Rare Disease Collaborative Networks (RDCNs) now operational and the National Genomic Test Directory (NGTD) updated over 200 times since 2021.
Priority 1: Faster Diagnosis Through Genomics Innovation
Central to the plan is slashing diagnostic timelines via advanced genomics. Two pilot centres for undiagnosed rare diseases—one in the north, one in the south—will launch by autumn 2026, leveraging multiomics and functional genomics. These will integrate into the NHS GMS, with learnings scaled nationally.
The Generation Study, an NHS-embedded research effort, has sequenced genomes from over 36,000 newborns by January 2026, screening for 200+ conditions where early detection improves outcomes. Data feeds the National Genomic Research Library (NGRL), fueling university-led studies. Newborn bloodspot screening currently covers 10 conditions, with pilots for spinal muscular atrophy (SMA) and severe combined immunodeficiency (SCID) advancing via the UK National Screening Committee (UK NSC).
- Action 17: Ongoing research by Consilium Scientific and Realise Advocacy maps the 'diagnostic odyssey,' using NHS data to identify delays and inequalities (report due July 2026).
- Action 5: Undiagnosed pilots expand access to cutting-edge testing.
Universities play a key role; for instance, a University College London (UCL)-led evaluation assesses newborn whole genome sequencing's feasibility and ethics.
Genomic Medicine Service: A Pillar of Progress
The re-procured NHS GMS, effective April 2026, prioritizes rare diseases with comprehensive testing pathways. Since 2018, it has delivered 4,500+ diagnoses, with 90% of patients consenting to research use. Partnerships with Genomics England ensure data flows to academic researchers, driving discoveries in gene therapies and personalized medicine.
Over 35 NGTD updates in 2025 added tests for new indications, supporting the 10 Year Health Plan's universal genomic testing ambition.Research jobs in genomics are booming at UK universities, offering opportunities for scientists to contribute directly to these initiatives.
Priority 2: Empowering Healthcare Professionals with Knowledge
Awareness gaps among clinicians prolong misdiagnoses. The Genomics Education Programme (GEP) has expanded GeNotes—a digital hub with 600+ resources on 150+ rare diseases—to 12 specialties, attracting 3,700 monthly users. Integrated into GP software like Ardens, it partners with Medics For Rare Diseases.
- Action 6 & 30: GeNotes and genomics communication skills resources ongoing.
- Action 31: Genomics Training Academy (GTAC) builds specialist workforce.
The forthcoming 10 Year Workforce Plan (spring 2026) will quantify gaps in rare disease expertise, fostering university-NHS collaborations for upskilling.Explore higher ed roles in medical training.
Priority 3: Streamlining Care Coordination
Fragmented care exhausts patients. The plan advances 28 RDCNs and pilots multi-system disorder clinics (Action 37). NICE's new rare diseases quality standard (consultation January 2026) and neurology service specs guide coordinated delivery.
NIHR-funded CONCORD2 at the University of Cambridge analyzes coordination via surveys and literature (report July 2026). Case studies like Thrombotic Thrombocytopenic Purpura networks demonstrate reduced variation.
- Transition guidance for 0-25 year-olds.
- Modern Service Frameworks for efficiency.
Priority 4: Bridging Access to Treatments and Trials
Addressing the 95% treatment gap, MHRA's rare therapies framework drafts spring 2026, with NICE raising cost-effectiveness thresholds to £25,000-£35,000/QALY from April 2026. Clinical trials setup targets 150 days by March 2026.
Action 39 develops an NHS framework for individualized therapies, informed by workshops. Early Access schemes like ILAP have selected rare disease products.Read the full main report.
Addressing Inequalities: A New Frontier
Action 40 formalizes rare diseases in Core20PLUS5, targeting deprived areas. Toolkits for Highly Specialised Services (HSSs) and Exeter's inequities review highlight geographic and socioeconomic barriers. Workshops like Breaking Down Barriers amplify patient voices.
University Research Driving Change
UK universities are at the forefront. Cambridge's CONCORD2, UCL's newborn screening evaluation, and NIHR hubs (11 nodes) exemplify academic contributions. The Health Data Research UK (HDR UK) Secure eResearch Platform (£600m) enables rare disease data analysis, with Rare Diseases Research UK fostering partnerships.
Prospective researchers can find research assistant jobs or lecturer positions in genomics and rare diseases at leading institutions. The plan calls for a 2026 research strategy from funders like MRC.Academic career advice is essential for entering this field.
Future Outlook and Integration with National Plans
Post-framework, priorities embed in the 10 Year Health Plan and Life Sciences Sector Plan, promising universal genomics and preventive screening. Evaluations like portfolio review (Action 29, May 2026) will inform successors.
Challenges persist—workforce shortages, data silos—but momentum builds through NHS-university collaborations. For academics, this signals expanded funding for rare disease studies.
Photo by Phil Hearing on Unsplash
Career Opportunities in Rare Diseases Research
The plan's emphasis on research opens doors in higher education. From PhD opportunities in genomic sequencing to faculty roles in clinical trials, UK universities seek experts. Platforms like Rate My Professor offer insights into leading supervisors, while higher ed jobs and university jobs list openings. Thrive as a postdoc in this vital area, contributing to patient lives.







