The Herald on Sunday

No testing at all found in 62% of care homes

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THE majority of care homes in Britain have not had any staff tested for coronaviru­s, figures suggest, indicating the Government remains a long way off its target for universal testing by early June.

The latest data on staff testing suggests similarly low figures to those released in recent days regarding the testing of residents.

Sixty-two per cent of care homes did not have any staff tested since the start of the pandemic up to May 27, figures from the Data Analysis Bureau (T-DAB) and Person Centred Software (PCS) show.

On May 15 Health Secretary Matt Hancock said: “We will test every resident and every member of staff in our elderly care homes in England between now and early June.”

T-DAB looked at a total sample size of 12,407 care givers from 650 care homes across England, Wales and Scotland. It found that between the date of Mr

Hancock’s announceme­nt and May 27, 9% of care home staff had been tested. The figure for England was 10%.

Just 15% of care home staff have been tested at any time since the outbreak.

The organisati­on said 6% of care home staff were tested in the seven days up to May 27.

Simon Briscoe, director of T-DAB said: “The rate of testing ... has picked up but is still far too slow to get close to the target set by the Government. Testing of just one in 10 staff and residents is far below the rate demanded by industry bodies and targeted by Government.”

On Friday, Care England chief Prof Martin Green said testing in care settings needs to be prioritise­d, and called for “proper guidance” in relation to the English Test and Trace programme and equivalent­s across the UK.

Data released earlier this month by T-DAB suggested 38% of care homes have had no residents tested.

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