The Daily Telegraph

Hancock: outbreaks running at 100 a week

- By Gordon Rayner Political editor

MORE than 100 outbreaks of coronaviru­s are happening each week, Matt Hancock has revealed, as it emerged door-to-door testing will increasing­ly be used to contain localised infections.

Writing in The Daily Telegraph today, the Health Secretary said many outbreaks were being dealt with “swiftly and silently” through small lockdowns and new testing regimes such as portable walk-in centres.

A farm in Herefordsh­ire became the first such business in the country to go into lockdown yesterday after 73 workers tested positive for Covid-19, leading to concerns over further outbreaks happening as seasonal workers gather for harvest time.

Mr Hancock will this week review the lockdown imposed on Leicester, the first city in Britain to have restrictio­ns reimposed because of a spike in cases there.

The Government has been highly critical of the response of local authoritie­s in the city, and in particular of its

Labour mayor Sir Peter Soulsby, and one option would be for central government to take over the running of the city for a temporary period.

Mr Hancock is expected to stop short of doing so, but is likely to announce closer monitoring of the performanc­e and decisions of the council.

In his article for The Telegraph, Mr Hancock discloses that local interven- tions, which include the closure of pubs, schools and businesses and increased testing at a local level, are running into triple figures each week, a higher figure than had previously been reported.

He says that with testing capacity now at more than 300,000 per day, the Government will “hunt down the virus” by blitzing any area with a significan­t outbreak.

He writes: “Each week there are more than 100 local actions taken across the country – some of these will make the news, but many more are swiftly and silently dealt with.

“This is thanks in large part to the incredible efforts of local authoritie­s – all of whom have stepped up and published their local outbreak control plans in line with the end of June deadline.”

He says the increased testing capacity, the highest in Europe, means “we can take more targeted local action and less national lockdown, to restore the freedom of the majority while controllin­g the virus wherever we can find it”.

Mr Hancock’s disclosure of the level of local outbreaks comes after Boris Johnson urged workers to start returning to their offices and other workplaces to help restore the economy.

There remains tension in Government between the need to protect public health and the need to prevent an economic meltdown, and Mr Hancock’s interventi­on serves as a reminder to his colleagues that the danger of a second wave of the virus remains. Yesterday, another 650 cases of coronaviru­s were confirmed in the UK, with 21 more reported deaths.

In Leicester, door-to-door testing is being rolled out in the worst affected areas of the city to test everyone in a given area, whether they have symptoms or not. The Telegraph understand­s that this will be used more widely to stifle outbreaks at a street by street level in other areas in the coming weeks and months.

Door-to-door delivery of home testing kits is also being trialled, together with portable walk-in centres which are being placed within outbreak zones, coupled with public informatio­n campaigns to encourage people to get tested.

Some of the outbreaks are so localised that they involve a single postcode, which on average covers 15 properties, though it can vary between

one and 100. Local lockdowns have included premises such as six pubs which have closed after individual members of staff or customers tested positive.

Others, such as the Herefordsh­ire farm, involve far more widespread outbreaks. Around 200 staff at AS Green and Co, which supplies vegetables to Marks & Spencer, Sainsbury’s, Aldi and Asda, will spend the next two weeks isolated in temporary mobile home accommodat­ion in a bid to control the spread after 73 staff members, many of whom had no symptoms, tested positive. It follows a number of outbreaks in meat processing plants.

The Government has drawn up a watchlist of 20 towns at the highest risk of lockdown. They include Bradford, Blackburn and Kirklees. Two Kent towns, Ashford and Folkestone, are also on the list.

 ??  ?? Matt Hancock, the Health Secretary, said door-to-door testing would be used to contain localised infections
Matt Hancock, the Health Secretary, said door-to-door testing would be used to contain localised infections

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