Business Day

Care homes in UK baulk at taking blame

- Agency Staff London /AFP

UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson was accused on Tuesday of trying to rewrite history for appearing to blame the spread of Covid-19 in care homes on the institutio­ns themselves.

Britain has registered the worst death toll in Europe from the virus, with more than 44,000 confirmed deaths, and care homes have suffered badly.

The government initially said it did not believe care homes were at particular risk, and has been slow to roll out testing of staff and patients.

Critics also say the rapid transfer of elderly patients from hospitals to care homes at the start of the pandemic, to free up beds for coronaviru­s patients, helped spread the disease.

In an interview on Monday, Johnson said: “We discovered too many care homes didn’t really follow the procedures in the way that they could have.”

The Conservati­ve leader’s remarks caused outrage among care providers, with one accusing Johnson on Tuesday of an “appalling” attempt at deflecting attention from “an absolute travesty of leadership from the government”.

Mark Adams, CEO of Community Integrated Care, which provides services for people with learning disabiliti­es and dementia, told BBC radio that at best, the remarks were “clumsy and cowardly”.

“If this is genuinely his view, I think we’re almost entering Kafkaesque alternativ­e reality where the government sets the rules, we follow them, they don’t like the results, they then deny setting the rules and blame the people that were trying to do their best,” he said.

He was “unbelievab­ly disappoint­ed” in Johnson’s comments, Adams said, adding: “What we’re getting is history rewritten in front of us.”

The Office for National Statistics (ONS) has recorded 14,852 care home deaths involving Covid-19 in England and Wales in the year to June 26. But that is likely to be an underestim­ate, as almost 30,000 more residents have died than in the same period in 2019.

The National Care Forum membership organisati­on said

Johnson’s comments about care homes were neither accurate nor welcome”.“

The Independen­t Care Group, another representa­tive body, said the majority of providers have “done their absolute best in the face of slow and conflictin­g advice”.

But business secretary Alok Sharma insisted Johnson was “certainly not blaming care homes” for the spread of the coronaviru­s outbreak.

“What he was actually pointing out was that nobody knew what the correct procedures were at the time, because quite frankly we didn’t know what the extent of the asymptomat­ic transition was,” Sharma said on BBC radio.

The government has implemente­d “very detailed action plans” for care homes, ensuring a “rigorous testing regime” and funds for infection control.

It was not until April 15 more than three weeks after the nationwide lockdown — that the government committed itself to testing all residents before they are moved from hospital, and to testing all symptomati­c residents.

 ?? /Reuters ?? Thirsting for leadership: British Prime Minister Boris Johnson drinks water as he delivers a speech during his visit to Dudley College of Technology in Dudley in June.
/Reuters Thirsting for leadership: British Prime Minister Boris Johnson drinks water as he delivers a speech during his visit to Dudley College of Technology in Dudley in June.

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