This weekend, The Guardian highlighted the urgent need for a stronger NHS response to domestic abuse. If anyone knows how urgent this is, it’s us.
At IRISi, we’ve been delivering that response for over a decade. We don’t just agree with the article. We’ve been doing the work it calls for.
What the coverage didn’t say:
- The NHS is aware of a national, evidence-based model, which is called IRIS.
- It’s recommended in NICE guidance and proven to improve outcomes.
- However, it’s not being adequately funded and remains at the mercy of short-term commissioning cycles.
We don’t need to invent a solution. We have one. It works.
Through IRIS (in general practice) and ADViSE (in sexual health settings), we’ve trained over 4,600 clinicians in the past year alone, working in partnership with 38 specialist services operating locally. In 2023–24, nearly 16,000 women were identified and supported.
So why isn’t this happening everywhere? Because commissioning is patchy, and sustainable funding is missing. Integrated Care Boards (ICBs) hold the key, but they’re under-resourced, and domestic abuse too often gets pushed down the list.
Alongside our partners Standing Together, End Violence Against Women Coalition, and the Royal College of GPs, we’re calling for urgent national investment to scale the healthcare response to domestic abuse and sexual violence.