The Scotsman

Minister ‘slightly puzzled’ by reports that lateral flow tests may be limited

- By SAM BLEWETT

Lateral flow tests will remain free, UK Education Secretary Nadhim Zahawi has insisted amid criticism of suggestion­s they could be scaled back despite soaring coronaviru­s cases.

The Cabinet minister said he is "puzzled" by a report suggesting that their universal availabili­ty could be axed as they are limited to high-risk settings and for people with symptoms.

But he indicated support for reducing the isolation period from seven days to five, if it can be done safely, in order to reduce staffing pressures on the NHS and businesses.

The Sunday Times reported that Prime Minister Boris Johnson would make the announceme­nt on scaling back tests within weeks, while the NHS Test and Trace system could also be diminished.

First Minister Nicola Sturgeon warned the move would be "utterly wrongheade­d", while Labour said it would be the "wrong decision at the wrong time" while cases are so high.

But Mr Zahawi told Sky's Trevor Phillips on Sunday: "I saw that story this morning, which I was slightly puzzled by because I don't recognise it at all. This is absolutely not where we are at.

"For January alone we've got 425 million lateral flow tests coming in and they will continue to be available for free.

"I don't really recognise where that story is coming from."

Asked whether there are plans to stop lateral flow tests being free, he said: "Absolutely not."

But Liberal Democrat health spokeswoma­n Daisy Cooper pointed out that vaccines minister Maggie Throup confirmed early in December that "at a later stage" the "free universal provision of LFD (lateral flow device) tests will end".

Ms Cooper said the "left hand doesn't know what the right hand is doing" as she warned that scrapping free tests "would plunge millions into a cost of living with Covid crisis".

The criticism came as the Government seized on suggestion­s from scientists that the emergence of the seemingly less deadly Omicron strain is a step towards the virus becoming endemic, or regularly occurring, but easier to live with.

Mr Zahawi said the UK Health Security Agency will investigat­e whether the isolation period can be reduced to help alleviate staffing pressures.

"It would certainly help mitigate some of the pressures on schools, on critical workforce and others," he told Sky.

"But I would absolutely be driven by advice from the experts, the scientists, on whether we should move to five days from seven days. What you don't want is to create the wrong outcome by higher levels of infection."

Mr Zahawi anticipate­d a "bumpy" two weeks as more school staff end up off work isolating for coronaviru­s as case rates rise when pupils return.

He told the BBC'S Sunday Morning show that staff absenteeis­m was at around 8.5 per cent last week but "will increase, no doubt, because now schools are back we're going to see an increase in infection rates".

"I have to have contingenc­y plans for 10, 15, 20, 25 per cent absenteeis­m because Omicron is far more infectious," he added.

Mr Zahawi's comments came after the number of people to have died in the UK within 28 days of a positive Covid test passed 150,000.

The country was the seventh to pass the milestone for officially recorded deaths, following the US, Brazil, India, Russia, Mexico and Peru.

Rapid available to everyone in England, crucially including those without symptoms, in April.

They have been seen as a key way of suppressin­g the virus and have given confidence to people to safely mix with loved ones, particular­ly around Christmas.

But the Sunday Times report suggested there are concerns in Whitehall over their cost.

Ms Sturgeon questioned how the move in Westminste­r would affect funding for the "vital" tests in Scotland, adding: "Hard to imagine much that would be less helpful to trying to 'live with' Covid."

She questioned what would happen to funding for UK nations for testing under the Barnett formula if the Westminste­r Government went ahead with the move, adding: "Testing so vital, we'd have to consider continued funding but it would then come from existing budgets."

The Scottish Government accesses lateral flow tests that are procured by the UK Government on behalf of all four nations, and it pays for them via funding arrangemen­ts as part of the Uk-wide national testing programme.

Shadow health secretary Wes Streeting warned that charging for tests would hit families who are already facing a "cost-of-living crisis".

"Testing is absolutely crucial for keeping infections under control and avoiding the need for further restrictio­ns that impact on our lives, livelihood­s, and liberties," he said. "It's penny-wise and pound-foolish."

Confederat­ion of British Industry chief economist Rain Newton-smith said proposals to remove free tests now "make no economic sense". "Free lateral flow tests are a vital weapon in the UK'S Covid defences - they are central to keeping the economy open and allowing the UK to live confidentl­y with the virus," she said.

COMMENT, PAGE 22

 ?? ?? 0 Nadhim Zahawi says lateral flow tests will remain free
0 Nadhim Zahawi says lateral flow tests will remain free

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