The Department of Health and Social Care has published its new Pandemic Preparedness Strategy ,alongside the UK Government's response to the Covid-19 Inquiry Module 2 report.
The UK’s readiness for future pandemics is being overhauled through the publication of a new Pandemic Preparedness Strategy, backed by around £1 billion of investment in health protection measures including enhancing the UK’s access to essential vaccines and therapeutics, improving our pandemic surveillance systems and expanding our ability to roll out testing to the whole population.
Published by the Department for Health and Social Care, the strategy outlines concrete action already taken across government to embed lessons from Covid-19:
- PPE stockpiles will continue to be replenished with a variety of products and sizes.
- Departmental pandemic response plans will be reviewed to ensure government services and critical national infrastructure can be maintained effectively in a pandemic.
- An ‘All Pandemic Hazards Bill’ will be drafted to ensure the government has legislative options ready to review and introduce as necessary in response to a range of pathogens. This will sit alongside a suite of prepared options for community protection measures to support swift decision-making and prioritisation to keep people safe.
- UKHSA will build a new set of services to manage large scale testing, contact tracing and other scaled public health response measures.
- Chemicals and equipment stockpiles needed for testing will be built up further to protect against supply risks that could develop in the early stages of a pandemic.
- Data requirements to support decision making will be reviewed to ensure information needed in a pandemic response is available, transparent, and can be shared quickly between organisations and with the public.
The new strategy replaces a previous strategy for Pandemic Influenza published in 2011 and builds on wider reforms taking place through the 10 Year Health Plan.
It has been directly informed by early findings from the largest ever pandemic exercise in UK history which took place in Autumn 2025. Exercise Pegasus saw every government department, the devolved governments, arms-length bodies, local resilience forums, and external stakeholders respond to the spread of a simulated pathogen over a number of weeks.
This work sits alongside other action the government has already taken to build resilience in the vaccine supply chain since the last pandemic, including signing a ten-year partnership with Moderna. The world leading pharmaceutical company has built a state-of-the-art innovation and technology laboratory in Oxfordshire that is producing British-made vaccines to protect people across the country.
Minister of Health for Public Health and Prevention, Minister Sharon Hodgson said: “This strategy represents a serious, long-term commitment to protecting the public from future health threats. We learnt hard lessons from Covid-19, and it is our responsibility to act on them. Informed by Exercise Pegasus - the largest pandemic exercise in UK history - this strategy strengthens our capabilities, allowing us to respond faster and more effectively when the next health threat emerges. The public deserves nothing less.”
Susan Hopkins, Chief Executive at the UK Health Security Agency, said: “The Covid-19 pandemic has taught us the vital importance of being prepared for future health threats and this strategy underlines a shared commitment across Government to continue building our resilience capabilities. Our experience of responding to large-scale incidents and pandemics enables us to ensure that future responses are more effective, efficient and equitable, and we continue to play our part in developing our capabilities for diagnostics, surveillance, vaccine development and testing, to keep our country’s health secure.”
Read the UK Government’s response to the Covid-19 Inquiry Module 2 report online.