Derby Telegraph

UK ‘spent £10bn on costlier PPE’

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THE UK spent £10 billion extra in inflated prices for Covid pandemic-battling personal protective equipment due to an “inadequate” stockpile and a surge in global demand, a report has concluded.

Procuremen­t chiefs at the Department for Health and Social Care (DHSC) faced inflated prices, paying 1,300 per cent more for some items compared with 2019 prices during the first wave of the pandemic, the National Audit Office (NAO) said.

In its report published today, the NAO noted that providers made a “huge effort” to boost personal protective equipment (PPE) supplies as they realised that the country’s stockpiles, which were geared up for a flu-style pandemic, would not be sufficient. But, with the impact of the pandemic already starting to be felt across the world by early spring, officials paid “very high prices given the very unusual market conditions”, the report said.

The findings come a week after the Government spending watchdog found there was a “high-priority lane” establishe­d for PPE suppliers referred to the procuremen­t team by officials, ministers’ offices, MPs, peers and senior NHS staff, with about one

in 10 companies going through this route getting a contract, compared with one in 100 for those in the “ordinary lane”.

NAO head Gareth Davies said: “As PPE stockpiles were inadequate for the pandemic, Government needed to take urgent action to boost supplies.

“Once it recognised the gravity of the situation ... the price of PPE increased dramatical­ly, and that alone has cost the taxpayer around £10 billion.”

Meg Hillier, chairwoman of the Commons Public Accounts Committee, accused ministers of being “far too slow” to respond and said they were left paying “through the roof” for the frontline equipment. “The pandemic caught the NHS on the wrong foot. The national stockpile was nowhere near big enough for a coronaviru­s outbreak – a consequenc­e of the pandemic plans’ fixation on influenza,” the Labour MP said. “When the penny finally dropped, DHSC had to scramble to buy what was left as prices went through the roof.”

The NAO report noted that, between February and July, DHSC spent £12.5 billion on 32 billion items of PPE, with huge increases in price compared with 2019 due to the surge in demand and restrictio­ns on exports in some countries. This ranged from a 166% rise in the cost of respirator masks to a 1,310% rise in the price of body bags.

The auditor concluded that, had the Government been able to buy PPE at 2019 prices, expenditur­e to July 2020 would have been £2.5 billion – £10 billion less. The lastditch efforts also meant that, by the time the PPE was ordered, it did not arrive in time for the first wave, with action now being taken to stockpile Covid-style gear for future use by NHS and social care staff.

Of the 32 billion items of PPE procured between February and July, only 2.6 billion items were delivered to frontline organisati­ons in that period, the NAO said.

 ??  ?? Meg Hillier said ministers were left ‘paying through the roof’
Meg Hillier said ministers were left ‘paying through the roof’

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