The Post

Papers reveal why testing stopped

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Britain’s disastrous decision to abandon testing for coronaviru­s occurred because health systems could only cope with five cases a week, official documents show.

Newly released papers from Sage (the Scientific Advisory Group on Emergencie­s) show routine testing and tracing of contacts was stopped because Public Health England’s systems were struggling to deal with a handful of cases.

At a meeting on February 18, advisers said PHE could only cope with testing and tracing contacts of five Covid-19 cases a week, with modelling suggesting it might only be possible to increase this to 50 cases. Advisers then agreed it was ‘‘sensible’’ to shift to stopping routine testing, despite acknowledg­ing that such a decision would ‘‘generate a public reaction’’.

The decision to give up on testing those with symptoms of coronaviru­s is now seen as the key reason the UK has the highest death rate in Europe.

Over the next month the Government

will roll out a national contact tracing scheme, 14 weeks after officials raised the country’s poor readiness for such a scheme.

England is now recording around 8000 new cases of Covid-19 a day and the NHS ‘‘test and trace’’ system is promising to warn up to 10,000 people a day that they have been near someone who has tested positive.

The end of routine testing in the UK came on March 12, when Prime Minister Boris Johnson announced that anyone with symptoms of coronaviru­s should simply stay at home for a week. On this day the UK recorded 421 new cases.

However, after the virus raged uncontroll­ed through the UK that month, ministers were forced back to nationwide testing, announcing a ‘‘five pillar’’ plan on April 2, which finally led to a nationwide tracing service launched this week.

A desperate initial shortage of capacity to test and trace is detailed among 51 papers released on Friday, including minutes of 34 meetings, which occurred from January 22 to May 7. They reveal the crucial decisions which led to the disastrous decision to abandon routine testing – which is only now being ramped back up.

Minutes of a key Sage meeting on February 18 state: ‘‘Currently PHE can cope with five new cases a week (requiring isolation of 800 contacts). Modelling suggests this capacity could be increased to 50 new cases a week (8000 contact isolations) but this assumption needs to be stress tested with PHE operationa­l colleagues.’’ Sage concluded: ‘‘When there is sustained transmissi­on in the UK, contact tracing will no longer be useful.’’

Two days later, Sage’s scientists agreed that plans drawn up for PHE on discontinu­ing contact tracing are ‘‘sensible’’, the minutes show.

‘‘Any decision to discontinu­e contact tracing will generate a public reaction – which requires considerat­ion with input from behavioura­l scientists,’’ the minutes of February 20 note.

Prof Chris Whitty, the Chief Medical Officer for England, suggested the nation would abandon routine testing on March 5, in part because there was now a ‘‘slim to zero’’ chance of avoiding a global pandemic.

Jenny Harries, England’s deputy chief medical officer, later claimed abandoning testing was a policy choice because ‘‘there comes a point in a pandemic where that is not an appropriat­e interventi­on’’. The Government’s consistent position at the time was that they were following scientific advice.

However, the World Health Organisati­on said countries were not doing enough to test and isolate cases. At the same time, its chief Tedros Adhanom

Ghebreyesu­s urged countries to ‘‘test, test, test.’’ As the pandemic took hold across the world, Germany was carrying out 50,000 tests a day at a point when Britain could only manage 5000.

Jeremy Hunt, the former health secretary, has said the decision to abandon testing and tracing will rank as one of the ‘‘biggest failures of scientific advice to ministers in our lifetimes’’.

Earlier this month Sir Patrick Vallance, the Chief Scientific Adviser, singled out the failure to ramp up testing as one of the key errors in Britain’s handling of the crisis. The Government has since come under fire for a litany of testing failures, and criticism for repeatedly missed targets to carry out 100,000 tests a day.

On Saturday, PHE said it was certain it had capacity to track and trace more than five cases at the time of the minutes from the Sage meeting.

However, a spokeswoma­n was unable to clarify whether it would have been able to cope with 50 cases outlined in the Sage modelling. – Sunday Telegraph

As the pandemic took hold across the world, Germany was carrying out 50,000 tests a day at a point when Britain could only manage 5000.

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