NICE welcomes the equal treatment of health tech with medicines

NICE welcomes the equal treatment of health tech with medicines
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  • Government's 10 year health plan confirms new rules-based pathway for funding medical technologies
  • Health technologies addressing the most urgent needs will be funded on a more equal footing with medicines
  • NICE-recommended devices, diagnostics and digital tools will now be nationally reimbursed

The National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) has welcomed the inclusion of a rules-based pathway for medical technologies in the government’s NHS 10 year health plan.

The new approach is intended to ensure that high-impact devices, diagnostics and digital tools recommended by NICE to meet the most urgent health needs are nationally reimbursed and made available across the NHS in the same way that medicines are.

It means that select life-changing technologies will attract the same funding guarantees as medicines so that patients can access them faster and more fairly than before. 

Sam Roberts, chief executive at NICE, said: “This is the minimum a patient should expect from a digitised health service – and we’re pleased to see it included in the 10-Year Plan.  

“To give patients across the UK the best possible care, there must be a clear route to funding when NICE recommends a technology – whether it’s a medicine, device or digital tool. Until now, that principle has only applied to medicines.  

“The 10 year plan‘s commitment means access to life-changing technologies that address the most urgent needs will no longer be a case of a postcode lottery.

“Patients will get access wherever they live, the NHS will get better value by buying at scale, and we can stop relying on outdated tools that lead to poorer outcomes.” 

The new rules-based pathway will extend NICE’s technology appraisal process – which currently applies to medicines – to include selected high-impact medical technologies such as devices, diagnostics and digital tools that meet the NHS’s most urgent needs.

This new approach will come with associated reimbursement and enhanced support for adoption, helping to address longstanding variation in access.  

While not all technologies will be covered, those assessed through the expanded process will benefit from faster evidence generation, commercial support, and structured NHS rollout – helping ensure patients get access to clinically and cost-effective innovations, wherever they live.  

The government’s Industrial Strategy, published on 23 June 2025, also signals support for this direction, confirming that industry will be given access to the NHS through a rules-based pathway for MedTech and the creation of an NHS innovator passport – helping to align evaluation, adoption and scaling of new technologies in a more coordinated way.  

Following NICE’s December 2023 recommendation of hybrid closed loop systems – commonly known as ‘artificial pancreas’ technology – for children and young people with type 1 diabetes, uptake jumped from just over a third to nearly two-thirds of eligible patients within a year.

This was made possible by a centrally funded, five-year implementation plan agreed with NHS England.  

NICE will work closely with NHSE to support implementation and provide advice to help providers adopt new technologies effectively and affordably.  

With NHS waiting lists at all-time highs and services under mounting financial pressure, NICE says nationally coordinated adoption is vital to ensure value for money, reduce unwarranted variation, and make the most of the health technologies which are already transforming care.

The NHS 10 year plan was published today (3 July 2025), setting out plans for the NHS to be ‘digital by default’.

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