Sunderland Echo

Army and Test and Trace to help with mass testing

- Fiona Thompson fiona.thompson@jpimedia.co.uk @fionathomp­sonjpi

The Government has said the Armed Forces and the NHS Test and Trace service will be hand to help bring in mass testing to Sunderland.

It followed concerns from the leader of Sunderland City Council Councillor Graeme Miller that questions asked by him and others in charge of North East councils have not been given answers to questions on a host of Covid measures, including mass testing and the roll out of the vaccine.

Coun Miller, a member of the LA7 which represents council areas across Tyne and Wear, County Durham and Northumber­land which all signed to a mass testing programme last month, also said his request for an additional testing site in Washington was turned down.

He had hoped it would join others at Jack Crawford House, next to Houghton Primary Care Centre, and two mobile units.

The Government has said the median distance to reach a test is 2.5miles – the distance from Washington Village to Houghton’s site is 5.5miles by car, while to get to the Hendon centre it is 8.6miles.

Coun Miller highlighte­d how 2,000 members of the Army helped run the scheme in Liverpool, but says there has been no pledge of people or cash to help boost the testing here on Wearside.

In response, the Department of Health and Social Care said: “Local authoritie­s are key channels to support testing and those that fall into Tier 3 will be able to draw on

the support of NHS Test and Trace and the Armed Forces to help the delivery of extensive community testing.

"Including targeting highest risk areas under the Government’s new Covid Winter Plan.

“And with more than 700 test sites now in operation as part of our existing symptomati­c testing service, the median distance travelled for a test is just 2.5miles.”

The department has said from next week, tens of thousands of people will receive a

vaccine, following the decision by the Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency to approve the Pfizer and BioNTech jab.

It added the NHS has “decades of experience in rolling out successful widespread vaccinatio­n programmes and has put in place extensive deployment plans”.

Councils in Tier 3 areas can apply for the new sixwe ek community testing programme to “complement wider local strategies to tackle the virus.”

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 ??  ?? Soldiers from the 1st battalion Coldstream Guards helped run the testing scheme in Liverpool. Below, Cllr Graeme Miller.
Soldiers from the 1st battalion Coldstream Guards helped run the testing scheme in Liverpool. Below, Cllr Graeme Miller.

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