Standards Framework

Better sexual health education
for every student.

Developing a national 16–24 RSE standards framework in England, supported by resources, guidance, and educational outreach to improve sexual and reproductive health education across post-16 settings.

Public health surveillance in England 2024

100,000+

New STI diagnoses among 15–24 year olds in 2024

UKHSA Sexually Transmitted Infections Report

Highest

Age specific STI rates nationally

UKHSA Public Health Surveillance Data

No national standard

Exists for RSE education across post-16 settings

CSRH Analysis

Why this matters

A structural gap in post-16 education

There is no national standard for post-16 RSE in England. The result is variable provision and students without consistent or comprehensive information.

01

Variable provision

Coverage, scope, and delivery approaches differ substantially across institutions. Many learners do not receive consistent or comprehensive information about their sexual and reproductive health.

02

Gaps in knowledge and confidence

Inconsistent RSE affects learners’ confidence engaging with sexual and reproductive health services, recognising risk, and seeking timely testing with direct public health consequences.

03

No accountability

Without national standards, there is no basis for benchmarking provision, assessing quality, or holding institutions accountable for what they deliver.

100,000+

New STI diagnoses among 15-24 year olds in England in 2024. This age group consistently records the highest rates nationally across recent surveillance cycles.

UKHSA Sexually Transmitted Infections Report, 2024

A key structural issue is identifiable, there is no national standard for post-16 sexual and reproductive health education in England.

Our work

The CSRH 16–24
RSE Standards Framework

We are building a national framework in three stages, from evidence and research, through standards development, to implementation and measurable impact in post-16 education settings across England.

Phase 1 — Current In progress

Evidence & Research

Building our evidence base

Reviewing public health surveillance data, existing RSE provision, and current clinical guidance to establish what a national standard needs to address and where the gaps are.

  • STI and sexual health outcome data analysis
  • Landscape review of current post-16 RSE provision
  • Clinical and public health guidance synthesis
Phase 2 Upcoming

Standards Development

Defining what good looks like

Co-developing evidence backed standards with educators, students, and public health professionals. Defining a national baseline for post-16 RSE content and delivery.

  • National standards for 16-24 RSE content
  • Curriculum and delivery guidance
  • Stakeholder consultation
Phase 3 Upcoming

Implementation & Impact

Measuring what changes

Supporting post-16 institutions in implementing the framework, with assessment tools and monitoring indicators to track measurable changes in learner knowledge and confidence.

  • Implementation toolkit for institutions
  • Assessment and benchmarking tools
  • Impact measurement against health outcomes
“This variability is associated with gaps in knowledge and confidence, and can affect learners’ comfort in engaging with sexual health services, recognising risk, and seeking timely testing.”
CSRH — Framework rationale, 2026

Get involved

Framework in development

Whether you’re an educator, student, institution, or public health professional, we welcome enquiries and collaboration at every phase of our development.

Educators & institutions

If you work in a post-16 education setting and are interested in piloting or providing feedback on the standards framework, get in contact with us.

Public health professionals

We welcome collaboration with local authorities, NHS trusts, and health protection teams working on sexual health outcomes for young people.

Students & graduates

Your experience of RSE provision shapes our work. We want to hear from students and graduates about what good sexual health education looks like in practice.

FREERead our student sexual health guide →