GPs in England and Wales to offer endometriosis spit test
GPs in England and Wales will soon offer a saliva "spit test" and gut electrical-signal scan to help diagnose endometriosis faster, potentially cutting the current average 9-year wait. These tests aim
People with suspected endometriosis will soon be able to ask their GP for two quick, non-invasive tests that could slash diagnosis times from nearly a
Read Full Story at BBC Health โWhy This Matters
For millions of women and people assigned female at birth, endometriosis has long been a condition shrouded in diagnostic delayโpartly due to outdated medical skepticism and partly because symptoms mimic other disorders. The introduction of non-invasive diagnostic tools like the saliva test and gut-scan could finally shift the narrative from prolonged suffering to proactive care, addressing a systemic failure in womenโs health that has persisted for generations.
Background Context
Endometriosis is estimated to affect one in ten women of reproductive age, yet diagnosis still relies heavily on invasive laparoscopic surgery in many cases, perpetuating a cycle of delayed treatment. The NHSโs 2023 Womenโs Health Strategy highlighted this disparity, framing it as an equity issueโwomen wait an average of 7.5 years in the UK for a diagnosis, a delay that exacerbates pain, mental health struggles, and even infertility.
What Happens Next
If these tests prove cost-effective and scalable in pilot programs, they may pave the way for wider adoptionโand a potential overhaul of NICE guidelines, which currently do not endorse non-surgical diagnostic methods for endometriosis. Critics will likely scrutinize the accuracy of the saliva test (a proxy biomarker) and the gut-scanโs reliability, while advocates push for parallel reforms in GP training to ensure these tools donโt become another bureaucratic hurdle.
Bigger Picture
The shift toward biomarker-based and functional diagnostics reflects a broader trend in womenโs health, where conditions historically dismissed as โhystericalโ or โoverstatedโ are now being re-examined through a scientific lens. It also underscores the growing pressure on healthcare systems to adopt low-cost, high-impact innovationsโespecially as AI and portable medical tech begin to fill gaps left by traditional diagnostics.

