It’s one of the most prestigious honours for health and care charities in the UK
A Belfast-based charity that’s improving the physical and mental health of LGBTQIA+ people has scooped a top influential UK health award.
The Rainbow Project, a charity based in Belfast but serving all of Northern Ireland, has secured one of this year’s GSK IMPACT Awards, one of the most prestigious honours for health and care charities in the UK, which is awarded by global biopharma company GSK in partnership with The King’s Fund.
The award recognises the charity’s work delivering crucial health and wellbeing services for Northern Ireland’s LGBTQIA+ community, amid a context of high levels of mental distress in its community, alongside longstanding religious, political and social pressures in the country.
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Socially conservative political pressures in Northern Ireland have significantly shaped the pace of LGBTQIA+ rights, contributing to delayed reforms. As a result, Northern Ireland was the last part of the UK to decriminalise homosexuality and to legalise same-sex marriage. LGBTQIA+ communities experience disproportionately poorer health outcomes and care.
This is particularly evident in mental health: The Rainbow Project’s own survey of more than 1,100 members highlights the scale of the issue, with 39% reporting self-harm, 45% experiencing suicidal ideation and 65% reporting depression.
Following a rigorous selection and assessment process, The Rainbow Project was chosen from a record number of award entries as one of the 10 winners of the 2026 GSK IMPACT Awards. Now in its 29th year, the awards are delivered in partnership with leading health and care charity The King’s Fund. Since its inception in 1997, more than 570 charities have received a GSK IMPACT Award.
The awards are widely seen as a hallmark of excellence in the charity health sector and are designed to recognise outstanding small and medium-sized charities working to improve people’s health and wellbeing in the UK. Award- winners will receive £40,000 in unrestricted funding, as well as a place on a highly coveted leadership- development programme provided by The King’s Fund.
The award judges were particularly impressed by The Rainbow Project’s co-cultural counselling service – the only one of its kind in Northern Ireland. All counsellors are members of the LGBTQIA+ community and deliver sensitive, tailored care using an LGBTQIA+ affirmative approach, with demand doubling over the past year. The charity is also leading efforts to ban conversion practices in Northern Ireland, which attempt to change or suppress a person’s sexual orientation or gender identity.
Judges also praised The Rainbow Project for its strategic partnerships across Northern Ireland, its role in meeting identified need and filling service gaps, and its innovative health and care initiatives that genuinely reflect the needs of LGBTQIA+ people.
One example is its Cancer Champions programme, developed with Macmillan Cancer Support, which supports LGBTQIA+ people affected by cancer by promoting screening, improving inclusivity and providing information and advice. This includes groundbreaking work supporting trans and non-binary people to access breast screening, with clear, accessible guidance on what to expect and how to attend.
Scott Cuthbertson, Chief Executive Officer of The Rainbow Project, said: “We are delighted to be one of the 10 winners of the 2026 GSK IMPACT Awards. The Rainbow Project is a charity about making change: as LGBTQIA+ people, we know that the status quo does not work for us, so our impact is vitally important to us.
“We have worked hard to build an organisation that meets the needs of the communities we serve, while standing resilient to the challenges faced in Northern Ireland. We are very much looking forward to the leadership development programme provided by The Kings Fund, to continue to improve our impact in future.”
Charities are operating in a more difficult financial environment while demand for their services continues to grow. As the Health and Social Care in Northern Ireland (HSCNI) service experiences significant pressures and undergoes structural changes, charities remain essential for meeting the needs of underserved communities and working with the service to ensure LGBTQIA+ people receive the standard of care they deserve.
Against this backdrop and amid growing demand for services, the judges were impressed by The Rainbow Project’s unwavering commitment to providing high-quality counselling services, noting that the organisation provided more than twice as many counselling sessions in 2024/25 compared with the previous year.
Established by volunteers in 1994, The Rainbow Project was initially formed in response to concerns about the spread of HIV among gay men in Northern Ireland, providing information on HIV, AIDS and other sexually transmitted infections, alongside safer sex materials.
Since then, the charity has expanded to support the entire LGBTQIA+ community, offering more holistic physical and mental health support, including counselling delivered both online and in person to reach people in more remote areas. It also provides employability advice for young people, including access to a youth work qualification.
In 2023/24, the charity delivered more than 1,700 counselling sessions, supporting around 240 people, distributed over 30,000 safer sex packs across Northern Ireland, and provided 189 rapid HIV or syphilis tests.
It also trained more than 800 professionals across the public, private and voluntary sectors on sexual orientation and gender awareness and delivered 314 ‘listening ear’ wellbeing sessions for people awaiting counselling.
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