South Wales Echo

Welsh Government failing to meet target for testing

- The coronaviru­s testing centre at Cardiff City Stadium and, below, Health Minister Vaughan Gething

THE Welsh Government is failing to meet its target of 5,000 tests a day for front-line workers, the Health Secretary has admitted.

Vaughan Gething said Wales can only provide 1,300 tests a day despite previously saying the number would increase by mid-April before hitting 9,000 tests at the end of the month.

Mr Gething told the latest daily coronaviru­s briefing he was unable to say what the testing capacity for key workers will be at the end of this week but spoke of his “frustratio­n” that even the current numbers of tests available are not being taken up.

It comes a day after the drivethrou­gh testing centre at the Cardiff City Stadium was temporaril­y shut on Bank Holiday Monday because of the low number of key workers who had been referred to it that day.

The workers booked in on Monday had their tests moved a day earlier but Mr Gething said the low uptake showed a “visible sign of where something hasn’t worked” and said he would ask Public Health Wales to review procedures.

He said: “We have capacity that is not used because we haven’t had referrals in. We need to make use of that capacity.

“I would much rather be in a position where referrals are coming in and we have a modest backlog to work through rather than not having enough referrals to come in to make use of the capacity that we have.”

Mr Gething said only 12 of Wales’ 22 local authoritie­s have so far referred their social care workers to have tests, of which there are currently enough for more than 100 workers each day.

He said: “My frustratio­n I’m sure borne out and multiplied by frontline staff who are waiting and selfisolat­ing at home who are thinking if they had a test they would be able to understand if they’re Covid19-free and be able to return to work.

“I expect over this week to see much better take up of our usage.”

After his comments, Conservati­ve health spokeswoma­n Angela Burns called the failure to increase testing of key workers a “scandal”.

Ms Burns described the testing process as “overly complicate­d, drowning in bureaucrac­y and fragmented, and therefore inconsiste­nt across Wales and poorly understood”.

She said: “Health boards have different systems, county and borough councils have different systems, results appear to be very slow, and it seems that care homes are not clear what the system is, while Public Health Wales is slow in pushing out results.

“People are waiting days longer than they should for results.”

Mr Gething rejected suggestion­s a UK-wide procuremen­t system orchestrat­ed by the UK Government will lead to a shortage of PPE for Welsh care providers, despite some suppliers of equipment reportedly being turned away by manufactur­ers.

He said the UK-wide approach benefits Wales as a “relatively small country in a global market” and will as a result receive a proportion of PPE based on its population

But he added that rules were needed to ensure fairness.

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