Leek Post & Times

NHS leader calls for ‘sensible debate’ on masks

With cases rising fast, coronaviru­s hasn’t gone away. Here we look at one NHS manager’s ideas for helping get the number of cases down again and take the pressure off hospitals...

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ALEADING NHS official is calling for a national debate on face masks and other ‘sensible precaution­s’ to ease covid pressures on hospitals.

Chris Hopson, chief executive of NHS Providers, says the Government ‘doesn’t seem to want to talk about coronaviru­s anymore,’ despite rising numbers of covid-positive patients in hospital beds.

There were 288 patients with Covid-19 at University Hospitals of North Midlands, as of April 12, the highest number since February 2021.

While many of these would have been admitted for other reasons, and far fewer are now getting seriously ill with covid, the number is still putting pressure on already over-stretched services.

The NHS in Stoke-on-trent and Staffordsh­ire announced a system-wide critical incident last week.

Now, according to The Times,

Mr Hopson says that Britain needs a ‘proper grown-up national debate about what living with covid actually means.’ He has also said that the debate on covid curbs should be supported by Professor Chris Whitty, the chief medical officer, and Sir Patrick Vallance, the chief scientific adviser.

Prime Minister Boris Johnson announced the end of all legal covid restrictio­ns in England back in February.

Since then, free testing has been ended, masks have been made optional in most public spaces, and those with covid are no longer required to isolate.

However, Mr Hopson believes that pretending that covid ‘doesn’t exist any more and that nobody needs to take any precaution­s’ was one of the reasons for the record number of infections in recent weeks.

A total of 27,255 positive cases were recorded in the UK in the latest figures from April 14, and in the seven days prior 1,984 deaths were recorded within 28 days of a positive test.

The rise in cases has been blamed for an increase in hospitalis­ations, as well as causing staff sickness, and putting extra strain on the NHS.

In fact, nearly 16,000 patients are currently hospitalis­ed with the virus – double what it was a few weeks ago. Also, more than 70,000 health service staff are currently off sick – 40 per cent of them have covid.

The impact of this has been felt nationwide with reports finding that around one in 10 patients has had to wait more than 12 hours to be seen by a health care profession­al.

This is the highest level since data was first collected in 2015.

Analysis from the Royal College of Emergency Medicine (RCEM) found that in the last week of March, 44 per cent of patients had to wait more than four hours to be seen, treated and then admitted or discharged – compared with just 19 per cent in the same week in 2019, before the pandemic began.

Reports have also emerged of people spending hours waiting on trolleys and in cubicles, delays in ambulance response times, in cancer care, and for planned surgeries.

Hopson stressed: “Nobody is arguing we should go back to draconian lockdown restrictio­ns, but this is not all or nothing.”

Instead, he has argued how other European nations have reached an ‘intermedia­ry point’ where the level of risk is outlined to the public.

This would help alleviate the strain felt by the NHS, who are running ‘higher levels of risk than ever seen before’ and swamped by pressure normally experience­d in the ‘very depths of winter.’

 ?? ?? NHS bosses want a national debate on wearing masks to ‘ease covid pressures’.
NHS bosses want a national debate on wearing masks to ‘ease covid pressures’.

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