Eastern Eye (UK)

Ministers criticised for UK Covid ‘public health failure’

LOCKDOWN DELAY AND LIGHT-TOUCH BORDER CONTROLS COST LIVES, SAYS CROSS-PARTY REPORT

-

A PARLIAMENT­ARY report published on Tuesday (12) said the UK government’s delay in locking down society when Covid-19 hit last year had cost lives and was “one of the most important public health failures” in the country’s history.

In a damning assessment, a cross-party group of MPs found that official pandemic planning had been too focused on influenza and had failed to learn the lessons from prior outbreaks of SARS, MERS and Ebola.

The 151-page study, published by two parliament­ary watchdog committees after months of hearings, comes ahead of an independen­t public inquiry into the government’s handling of the coronaviru­s crisis, due to begin next year.

Britain has been hit hard by the virus, with nearly 138,000 Covid deaths – one of the highest tolls in Europe – since March last year, raising questions about why it has fared worse than many other nations.

The MPs said the government had waited too long to push through lockdown measures in early 2020.

Leading advisors had pushed a “deliberate policy” to take a “gradual and incrementa­l approach” to interventi­ons such as social distancing, isolation and lockdowns, said the report.

That approach had been proved “wrong” and led to a higher death toll, the MPs said. They added that the failure to test elderly people who were discharged from hospitals into care homes early on also led to deaths.

“Decisions on lockdowns and social distancing during the early weeks of the pandemic – and the advice that led to them – rank as one of the most important public health failures the United Kingdom has ever experience­d,” they wrote.

There was a “policy approach of fatalism about the prospects for Covid in the community”, which had contribute­d to the failures.

Britain had also been too slow to introduce the isolation of infected people, and mistakenly implemente­d “light-touch border controls” only on countries with high Covid rates when most cases were coming from France and Spain.

Government planning for a pandemic was too “narrowly and inflexibly based on a flu model”, while ministers and scientific advisers were accused of “groupthink” by some experts, according to the report.

Former health secretary and Conservati­ve MP Jeremy Hunt, who chairs one of the report committees, said the government had also failed to absorb the early experience of South Korea and Taiwan, which were quick to introduce mass test and trace systems.

East Asian countries with direct experience of SARS and MERS responded best in the first half of the pandemic, Hunt told BBC radio.

“We were always running to catch up,” he said likening the response to a football match “with two very different halves”, pointing to the rapid launch of a successful mass vaccinatio­n campaign against Covid in December.

The panel took evidence from a range of figures, including prime minister Boris Johnson’s controvers­ial former chief adviser Dominic Cummings, who assailed his ex-boss’s handling of the crisis.

Responding to the report, government minister Steve Barclay noted the MPs’ praise of Britain’s vaccinatio­n rollout.

“But, of course, if there are lessons to learn, we are keen to do so,” he told Sky News, refusing to apologise and insisting the government had followed prevailing scientific advice. “I think there was rigorous debate within government with science, but of course it was unpreceden­ted, so it was a developing picture for the scientists themselves.” (AFP)

 ?? © Jonathan Brady/Pool/AFP via Getty Images ?? ‘WRONG PPROACH’: The first anniversar­y of Britain’s ational coronaviru­s lockdown as marked th statue
imea War nurs Mary Seacole at Thomas Hospital, London Marc 23 his year
© Jonathan Brady/Pool/AFP via Getty Images ‘WRONG PPROACH’: The first anniversar­y of Britain’s ational coronaviru­s lockdown as marked th statue imea War nurs Mary Seacole at Thomas Hospital, London Marc 23 his year

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom