The Herald (South Africa)

Boris slammed over ‘cowardly, clumsy’ care home comments

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British Prime Minister Boris Johnson faced a growing storm yesterday after saying some care homes did not follow procedures to stem the spread of Covid-19 deaths, sparking an accusation that he was trying to rewrite history.

Britain has one of the highest death tolls in the world from Covid-19, at more than 44,000, with about 20,000 dying in care homes, according to government statistics.

Though the government has been heavily criticised by opposition politician­s and some medics over the slow delivery of protective clothing and testing in care homes, Johnson appeared to suggest blame for the outbreaks lay with the care homes themselves.

“We discovered too many care homes didn’t really follow the procedures in the way that they could have, but we’re learning lessons,” Johnson said on Monday.

The CEO of the Community Integrated Care charity, Mark Adams, said he was “unbelievab­ly disappoint­ed” by Johnson’s comments, slamming them as clumsy and cowardly, adding they represente­d a dystopian rewriting of history.

“To get a throwaway comment almost glibly blaming the social care system, and not holding your hands up for starting too late, doing the wrong things, making mistake after mistake, it is just frankly unacceptab­le,” he told BBC radio. “If this is genuinely his view, I think we’re almost entering a Kafkaesque alternativ­e reality.”

A Reuters special report detailed how the government ’ s focus on preventing emergency wards from being overwhelme­d left care home residents and staff exposed to Covid-19.

To free up hospital beds, many patients were discharged into homes for the elderly and vulnerable, many without being tested for the coronaviru­s.

After his comments, a spokespers­on for Johnson said: “Throughout this crisis, care homes have done a brilliant job under very difficult circumstan­ces.

“The PM was pointing out that nobody knew what the correct procedures were because the extent of asymptomat­ic transmissi­on was not known at the time,” he said. —

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BORIS JOHNSON

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