Government drafts in new violence against women and girls adviser amid fears it will miss its target

https://static.independent.co.uk/2025/03/17/19/17191330-4cb1db28-c2b1-4120-bdf3-6fd7bd6068cb.png?width=1200&auto=webp&crop=3%3A2

The government has appointed a new adviser to overhaul the NHS response to violence against women and girls, amid growing fears it will fail to meet its flagship target of halving VAWG.

The Independent understands Labour MP Jess Asato has been drafted in as a Violence Against Women and Girls (VAWG) adviser to the Department of Health and Social Care, just days after Refuge branded the chancellor’s Budget a ā€œprofound disappointmentā€ to survivors.

Ms Asato has been put in charge of steering a major overhaul of the NHS response to VAWG, having been tasked with reforming the culture of the health service and ensuring women experiencing violence are identified and supported at the earliest opportunity.

Labour MP Jess Asato has been appointed to the new role
Labour MP Jess Asato has been appointed to the new role

The role will see her advise on how alcohol is linked to VAWG, embedding support for victims and survivors in neighbourhood health services, and improving local commissioning of VAWG services.

Ms Asato will also lead on work to integrate services into new neighbourhood health centres, which would bring together GPs, nurses, pharmacists and other services under one roof.

It comes amid growing concern over the government’s ability to meet its target of halving violence against women and girls within a decade.

In the wake of last week’s Budget, Refuge head of policy and public affairs Ellie Butt said it was a ā€œprofound disappointment – not only to Refuge, but to the thousands of survivors who have been counting on the government to finally take tangible action to tackle the epidemic of violence against women and girls (VAWG) through investment in specialist support servicesā€.

While the government’s decision to lift the two child benefit cap was welcomed, Refuge warned that the VAWG sector is still ā€œin a worse position than everā€, saying that some services ā€œhave been pushed beyond breaking point and are now being forced to closeā€ as a result of the sector bearing the brunt of spending cuts.

Ms Butt added: ā€œThe autumn Budget was a critical moment for the government to demonstrate its commitment to women and girls. Instead, it marks yet another missed opportunity to show survivors that it is serious about its pledge, with the chancellor once again failing to prioritise VAWG in the Budget.

ā€œWhile we appreciate the strain on public finances, domestic abuse costs our economy Ā£84 billion every year – a figure that could be significantly reduced with investment into specialist support services.

ā€œAn estimated shortfall of Ā£307 million currently exists in spending on specialist domestic abuse services.ā€

It comes after the government’s domestic abuse tsar Dame Nicole Jacobs in September warned that ā€œtens of thousands of child victims are currently not getting the level of help and support they need to recover from abuseā€, adding that she remains ā€œlargely unclear on what the government intends to do about it.ā€

ā€œHalving violence against women and girls within a decade is an ambitious target and one I applaud.

ā€œBut with the VAWG strategy still delayed and no major funding announced for specialist domestic abuse services, I fail to see where the momentum within government is coming from to ensure this commitment succeedsā€, she warned.

There is also growing public pressure on the government to do more to tackle VAWG, with a new YouGov poll commissioned by Refuge showing that only around 1 in 6 UK adults (16 per cent) believe current government spending is sufficient to meet the target to halve VAWG within the next decade.

Nearly half (49 per cent) say the government is not investing enough, while 35 per cent are unsure.

Ms Asato – who worked as head of policy and public affairs at children’s charity Barnardo’s and also worked for domestic abuse charity SafeLives before being elected as an MP – said VAWG is not ā€œjust a criminal justice issue, it’s a public health emergencyā€.

ā€œWhen we strengthen healthcare systems to identify abuse early, support survivors, challenge perpetrators and address the trauma that fuels cycles of harm, we make communities safer. Ensuring health is not an add-on to prevention; it is a core part of the solutionā€, she added.

Meanwhile, Jess Phillips said the role would help to promote a ā€œwhole-society approachā€ to tackling VAWG.

ā€œThe appointment of Jess Asato as an adviser is an important step towards ensuring the NHS can spot abuse sooner and connect victims to the support they needā€, she said.

It comes ahead of a major speech by the foreign secretary on Tuesday, where she will warn that abuse of women and girls is ā€œcrossing borders at unprecedented scale and speedā€.

Speaking at the launch of a global coalition aimed at tackling violence against women and girls, Yvette Cooper will announce new British efforts to deal with online abuse, including a Ā£4.85 million package from the UK’s integrated security fund to support the expansion of an online platform that helps websites block the non-consensual sharing of intimate images.