Western Daily Press (Saturday)

Race to secure more ventilator­s as talks with industry go on

-

DOWNING Street has insisted it is doing “all we can” to secure more ventilator­s as the Prime Minister continued talks with industry officials on producing more for the NHS.

Boris Johnson had a phone call with businesses involved in the manufactur­er of ventilator­s on Thursday evening, where he was updated on how soon more could be produced, Number 10 confirmed. .

Downing Street said on Thursday that 8,000 additional ventilator­s had been ordered by the Government to boost the stock of 8,000 already available to the health service.

Officials said thousands more would be available in the “coming weeks”, with the peak of the virus expected to hit within the next fortnight.

On domestic efforts to produce more ventilator­s for the patients most severely impacted by coronaviru­s, the Prime Minister’s official spokesman said on Friday: “There is a real cross-Government effort going on to get these ventilator­s online as soon as possible. The PM spoke with industry again last night. We are doing all we can to make progress.”

Asked about the phone call with industry leaders, the No 10 spokesman added: “It was following up on his original call to action – it is right to stress that it was a telephone call.

“It was to get a progress report and the PM is very clear on the importance of making progress on this.

“It is the subject of a regular stocktake at the ‘war cabinet’ meetings to ensure we are doing all we can to remove any obstacles to get the ventilator­s online.”

Those confirmed to be involved include Ford, GKN Aerospace, Babcock, Siemens, McLaren, Rolls Royce, Airbus and Renault F1, along with “many other UK manufactur­ers”.

Any new companies offering to make ventilator­s would need to have their prototype checked, Downing Street said.

The move would impact any manufactur­ers switching to making ventilator­s for the NHS, with Wiltshireb­ased entreprene­ur Sir James Dyson emailing Dyson staff this week to say an initial order of 10,000 units had been placed by the UK Government – an announceme­nt not confirmed by No 10.

Asked whether clinical checks could hold up such orders of extra life-saving machines, the PM’s spokesman said health regulators had deemed it “right and proper” for checks to be carried out before use on the front line of the NHS.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom