Bharadwaj, Hareesha Rishab, Dahiya, Dushyant Singh, Dalal, Priyal, Fuad, Muhtasim, Dhali, Arkadeep, Sokhal, Balamrit Singh, Koo, Thai Hau, Gandhi, Dhruv, Gaur, Aditya et al (2025) Inequalities in Gastrointestinal Care Provision in the United Kingdom. Digestive Diseases and Sciences . ISSN 0163-2116
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Official URL: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10620-025-09432-x
Abstract
Background
Gastrointestinal (GI) and liver diseases impose a substantial burden on the United Kingdom’s health system, ranking among the leading causes of mortality, cancer-related deaths, and hospital admissions. Despite the universal framework of the National Health Service (NHS), profound inequalities persist across socioeconomic, geographic, and ethnic lines.
Objectives
This review focuses on colorectal cancer (CRC) and hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) as exemplar conditions, synthesising current evidence on disparities across the care continuum and exploring strategies to mitigate them.
Methods
Current national data and published evidence were reviewed to assess inequities in disease prevalence, access to care, and outcomes across socioeconomic strata, regions, and ethnic groups. The analysis also examined workforce distribution, policy frameworks, and emerging interventions aimed at addressing these disparities.
Results
Disease prevalence and outcomes are markedly worse in socioeconomically deprived regions; liver disease mortality is more than twice as high in the poorest deciles, and CRC survival is significantly lower among disadvantaged populations. Access to care remains uneven—deprived groups exhibit lower CRC screening uptake, delayed diagnoses, and higher emergency presentation rates. Routine HCC surveillance in at-risk patients is inconsistently delivered. Workforce shortages and maldistribution exacerbate these inequities, with under-resourced regions facing longer waiting times and limited specialist access. Systemic challenges, including social determinants, data deficits, and policy underprioritisation, further hinder progress.
Emerging Developments
Promising advances include the NHS’s expansion of community diagnostic centres, targeted workforce investment, national hepatitis C virus (HCV) elimination programmes, and structural interventions such as minimum unit pricing for alcohol. Technological innovations—including non-invasive diagnostics and digital tools—offer additional opportunities to bridge care gaps.
Conclusions
Targeted actions, such as implementing primary care FibroScan services, CRC outreach initiatives with GP endorsement, and patient navigation for HCC surveillance, are critical to reducing inequalities and improving outcomes. By addressing upstream determinants and ensuring that innovations reach under-served populations, the UK can progress toward reducing GI health inequalities, improving outcomes, and achieving more uniform digestive health across all communities.
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