England’s first dedicated men’s health strategy sets out a new direction for how the NHS, government and community partners will support men and boys. It brings together suicide prevention, mental health support, cancer care, addiction interventions and workplace initiatives into a single, focused plan designed to help men live longer, healthier and happier lives.
Launched on International Men’s Day, the strategy responds to long-standing evidence that men are more likely to die younger, struggle with addiction and suffer in silence when facing mental distress. It aims to meet men where they are – in workplaces, sports grounds, communities and online – so that support becomes easier to find, more responsive and better tailored to men’s lives.
Men’s Health Strategy England places men and boys at the centre of a coordinated approach to physical and mental health, reflecting growing concern about early deaths, preventable illness and silent suffering. It combines national funding, community projects, football partnerships and new clinical initiatives to tackle suicide, addiction, cancer, lung disease and wider inequalities that shorten men’s lives.
Why England needs a men’s health strategy
A persistent gap in men’s life expectancy
For many years, men in England have died on average nearly four years earlier than women, with the gap even wider in deprived communities. Men are more likely to smoke, drink heavily, gamble and use drugs, and they are often slower to seek medical help when something feels wrong.
As a result, conditions such as cardiovascular disease, respiratory illness, some cancers and severe mental health problems frequently go unmanaged until they become harder to treat and more likely to shorten lives.
Everyday pressures and silent struggles
Social expectations, money worries, family responsibilities and workplace pressures all influence how men cope with stress and ill health. Many men still feel that asking for help shows weakness, particularly when it comes to mental health or addiction.
Moreover, health services are not always designed in ways that feel welcoming or convenient, especially for men who work long or irregular hours. The strategy recognises that these patterns do not reflect personal failure but a wider system that needs to change how it engages with men.
Putting suicide prevention and mental health first
Targeted support for men at highest risk
Suicide remains one of the leading causes of death for men under 50, with three quarters of all suicides in England involving men. To respond, the government is investing £3.6 million over three years in local suicide prevention projects designed specifically for middle-aged men in areas where the risk is highest.
These projects will be co-designed with experts and men who have lived experience of mental health crisis, ensuring that services are grounded in real-world needs and speak in language that men recognise.
Football partnerships reaching millions of fans
Football plays a central role in the strategy’s efforts to reach men who might never book a GP appointment. Through the Premier League’s Together Against Suicide initiative with the Samaritans, clubs are embedding mental health messaging into the matchday experience and creating an online hub for fans.
Additionally, clubs will work more closely with local NHS trusts so that stewards, staff and volunteers can signpost fans to talking therapies, helplines and community support when they are ready to reach out.
Main actions to improve men’s health
| Suicide prevention | Local projects for middle-aged men in higher-risk areas, linked to community and NHS support. |
| Prostate cancer care | Development of home PSA testing and easier local blood tests for men under monitoring or treatment. |
| Workplace health | Pilots with employers such as EDF Energy to support male workers in male-dominated industries. |
| Former miners | Enhanced lung disease support via extra investment in the Respiratory Pathways Transformation Fund. |
| Community programmes | Investment in men’s health projects reaching those least likely to use traditional services. |
Alongside these measures, mental health teams in schools are being expanded so that hundreds of thousands more pupils will have access to support by April 2026. Furthermore, the strategy recognises that loneliness, social isolation and harmful gambling patterns can all contribute to mental distress. Partnerships with charities, football clubs and local organisations aim to build safer spaces for conversation, earlier intervention and ongoing peer support.
- Local projects will co-design support with men who have lived experience of crisis.
- Football initiatives will normalise conversations about suicide, depression and anxiety among fans.
- Workplace schemes will bring health checks and advice directly into male-dominated industries.
- Research funding will shape better services for cancers, addiction and heart disease in men.
Improving care for prostate cancer and other major conditions
Giving men more control over prostate cancer monitoring
Men with prostate cancer will see meaningful changes in how their condition is monitored and managed. From 2027, subject to clinical approval, men whose cancer is being actively monitored or treated will be able to order and complete PSA blood tests at home, or arrange a local test via the NHS App. Moreover, this approach is intended to make it easier for men to stay on top of their health without repeated hospital visits, supporting timely decisions about treatment and follow-up.
Broader action on addiction, heart and lung disease
The strategy also addresses the harms caused by cocaine and alcohol, particularly in older men who have seen rising rates of cardiovascular deaths. A £200,000 trial of new brief interventions will test practical ways of supporting men to change risky habits before long-term damage occurs. Additionally, increased investment in respiratory pathways will improve care for former miners living with lung disease, while research funding will target cancers, heart disease and other conditions that shorten men’s healthy years of life.
Reaching men where they are
Workplaces, community spaces and men’s groups
Many of the most promising ideas in men’s health come from workplaces, community centres and peer-led projects rather than clinical settings. Organisations such as the UK Men’s Sheds Association, Movember and local voluntary groups already bring men together to share skills, talk about life pressures and look after their wellbeing. As a result, the strategy places strong emphasis on supporting and expanding these community-based models, understanding that trust is often built in everyday spaces rather than consulting rooms.
A joined-up national effort
Public health leaders, charities and professional bodies have welcomed the strategy as a turning point for men’s health policy in England. They highlight that a gender-aware approach can improve access, address inequalities and strengthen families and communities. Furthermore, a stakeholder group will oversee implementation and a one-year progress report will be published to maintain accountability. By learning from local projects, listening to men’s voices and investing in research, the government aims to halve the gap in healthy life expectancy between the richest and poorest regions while improving outcomes for all.
In Conclusion
Supporters of the strategy stress that it must now move quickly from ambition to delivery. Men and boys continue to face early deaths from preventable illnesses, addiction and untreated mental distress, and families across England live with the impact of suicide. Moreover, campaigners argue that progress will depend on sustained funding, collaboration across departments and a willingness to reshape services around how men actually live. The strategy is presented not just as a document but as an invitation to build a society in which every man’s health is understood, supported and valued.
Sources: Department of Health and Social Care and The Rt Hon Wes Streeting MP.
Prepared by Ivan Alexander Golden, Founder of THX News™, an independent news organization delivering timely insights from global official sources. Combines AI-analyzed research with human-edited accuracy and context.





