The Press and Journal (Aberdeen and Aberdeenshire)

Nationalis­ts angry that NHS England has taken lead over ventilator purchasing

- BY DANIEL O’DONOGHUE WESTMINSTE­R REPORTER

The battle to beat coronaviru­s descended into a political bun fight last night, as nationalis­t politician­s raged against a decision to hand Westminste­r the power to buy ventilator­s and testing kits.

Under the devolved settlement, each nation of the UK is responsibl­e for its own healthcare system and can make decisions independen­tly of each other.

However, it was announced yesterday that NHS England would be taking the lead on procuring and distributi­ng kit.

The move came after it emerged NHS boards across the UK were competing against each other to buy equipment.

The decision has received a mixed response, with some politician­s raising concerns that England could end up being prioritise­d.

Adam Price, leader of Welsh nationalis­ts Plaid Cymru, said: “How can we have any confidence in a system whereby we don’t have any independen­t means of securing our needs in Wales if we’re just told to trust the UK government to provide us without any ability to intervene ourselves?

“That certainly doesn’t give me the confidence that Wales’ needs will be best served.”

Western Isles SNP MP Angus MacNeil said the decision to hand procuremen­t powers to London was “a mistake”.

He added: “The UK has one of the lowest testing rates going. Norway, which is a similar size to Scotland, is testing at five and a half times the rate and has a lower death rate.

“If Scotland is to be shackled to anybody, the last people we should be shackled to is London.

“We should have the means and the ways of unshacklin­g ourselves and do what Norway does.”

However, north-east MP Andrew Bowie rejected the assessment, saying it was “very sensible” for the UK to be taking a joined up approach.

The Tory party vice-chairman said: “We had four different health boards looking for the same resources. It’s only right that the UK has come together and it’s for the benefit of everyone.

“I don’t think people in Aberdeensh­ire or the Western Isles for that matter care who is in charge of sourcing equipment, as long as it gets to people and is deployed as soon as possible.”

The Scottish Government was approached for comment.

The row came as a further 563 patients with coronaviru­s died in the UK, taking the total number of deaths in hospitals to 2,352.

The Department of Health said 29,474 people have tested positive for the virus, up 4,324 since Tuesday.

Dr Yvonne Doyle, medical director at Public Health England, told a daily coronaviru­s briefing in Downing Street that the UK was not in “as severe” a position as Spain, the US or Italy, but added there was “no reason to be complacent”.

She said: “It’s still too early to say whether the plateau of hospital admissions has ended.

“But we’ve now seen three days of increases in a row and again, we need to protect the NHS.

“And the best way to do that is to stay at home, to avoid catching the disease yourself and obviously avoid giving it to anyone else.”

Business Secretary Alok Sharma, appearing alongside Dr Doyle, said increasing testing capacity for the whole of the UK was “absolutely the government’s top priority”.

He said: “We’re now at 10,000 tests a day. We’re rolling out additional networks of labs and testing sites.

“In terms of protective equipment, over the last two weeks 390 million products have been distribute­d.”

“It’s only right that the UK has come together”

 ??  ?? POLITICAL FOOTBALL: Nationalis­t politician­s are angry that NHS England has taken the lead over buying of testing kits
POLITICAL FOOTBALL: Nationalis­t politician­s are angry that NHS England has taken the lead over buying of testing kits
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