UK Every baby in the UK to receive DNA testing - Personalised medicine, made possible through things like DNA testing, will form a big part the health secretary's new plan for the NHS.

Saturday 21 June 2025 11:39, UK

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A newborn baby in hospital. File pic: iStock

Every baby in the UK will have their DNA tested under a new 10-year plan for the NHS.

The whole-genome sequencing will screen for hundreds of diseases and allow people to "leapfrog" killer illnesses, according to the Health Secretary, Wes Streeting.

Speaking to the Telegraph, he revealed plans to move the NHS towards a model of sickness prevention rather than treatment.

Personalised medicine, made possible through things like DNA testing, will form a big part of that plan, with £650m pledged to genomics research by the government.

"The revolution in medical science means that we can transform the NHS over the coming decade, from a service which diagnoses and treats ill health to one that predicts and prevents it," said Mr Streeting in a statement.

"Genomics presents us with the opportunity to leapfrog disease, so we're in front of it rather than reacting to it."

The upcoming Life Sciences Sector Plan will be published in early July.

Newborns are currently offered a blood test when they are around five days old to check for nine rare but serious conditions.

In those blood spot tests, the baby's heel is pricked to collect a few drops of blood on a card, but with whole genome sequencing, blood samples are typically taken from the umbilical cord shortly after birth.

In the past, Mr Streeting has spoken about his desire to make the NHS more preventative, in order to reduce rates of serious illness and save money.

Technologies like artificial intelligence will be used by the health service to predict illness and allow treatment or medication to be offered much earlier.

"With the power of this new technology, patients will be able to receive personalised healthcare to prevent ill health before symptoms begin, reducing the pressure on NHS services and helping people live longer, healthier lives," said Mr Streeting.

Along with a greater focus on prevention, the Government's 10-year plan is expected to include Mr Streeting's two other "shifts" in the NHS: moving care away from hospitals to communities, and from analogue to digital services.

It follows Chancellor Rachel Reeves' announcement that the Government would increase NHS funding by £29 billion per year in real terms over the next three years as it tries to cut waiting lists in line with its election promises.
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"Genomics presents us with the opportunity to leapfrog disease, so we're in front of it rather than reacting to it."
What diseases can be prevented/got in front of thanks to DNA testing? There are of course genetic diseases but I'm curious which ones enable cost savings by catching early (I assume there are some that can be resolved if treated quickly rather than just starting a lifelong treatment early)?

Or, is collecting DNA from babies really a way of building a dataset for the genomics research that is mentioned in the article? Maybe the paywalled Telegraph article goes more in depth but this one goes from talking about DNA and genomics to general prevention via personalized healthcare which is mainly going to be a thing for people much older than the babies being sampled, at least for the forseeable future.
 
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Isnt it the royals, mostly?
Yeah, I think the current crop are the only ones not married to some sort of blood relative. Even Philip and Elizabeth were distant blood relatives, I think.
 
This isn’t about personalised medicine. It’s a Big Data thing. I have a feeling some massive company like Amazon or one of The other mega-corporates will be involved somehow.
The data will be mined and used and sold, and if bits can’t be sold it’ll be leaked.
Its incredibly valuable data. The genomics of a whole population combined with e health records (which will also be rolled out) will be worth tens of billions. A large pharma recently paid 23 and me or one of the other sequencers 200k per genome for access to the genome and associated questionnaire and health data for an Alzheimer’s study.
The other reason you know it’s a catch is that there isn’t much they actually CAN use it for for preventative medicine just now. The major ‘one gene and if you don’t catch it fast it kills you’ is already in the heel prick - stuff like PKU. If you ask rhe government for some examples of what this data will be used for to help health there will be shuffling of feet.
But it will be a huge money spinner. Used in law enforcement. And for insurance
 
Technologies like artificial intelligence will be used by the health service to predict illness and allow treatment or medication to be offered much earlier.
Grim, but at least they don't explicitly plan to have a Somalian larp as your doctor.
 
This isn’t about personalised medicine. It’s a Big Data thing. I have a feeling some massive company like Amazon or one of The other mega-corporates will be involved somehow.
The data will be mined and used and sold, and if bits can’t be sold it’ll be leaked.
Indeed, especially if some hackers menaged to access to it.
 
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A thinly veiled ploy to establish a national DNA database, the UK is still trying to speed run becoming an authoritarian shit heap, everyone is already poor as shit so that base is covered and blatant abuse and selectively applying the law is rife. Why does threads have to give the only hopeful outlook for the UK
 
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