Western Mail

Delay in care home testing ‘because Westminste­r didn’t share’

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THE UK Government not sharing informatio­n led to delays in introducin­g testing for care home residents in Wales during the pandemic, the Covid inquiry was told.

Vaughan Gething defended the 13-day delay between the UK and Welsh government­s putting in place measures for testing all care home residents during the pandemic.

Tom Poole KC, the lead counsel for the UK Covid-19 Inquiry, asked why it had taken so long to implement the policy, despite Public Health Wales having written to Mr Gething on April 17 – a day after it was put in place in England – to support the measure.

Mr Poole said: “It’s not until we get to April 29 that the Welsh Government changes its policy so that all patients being discharged from hospital to a care setting would be tested regardless of showing symptoms. How do you account for the delay between the policy change in England and Wales?”

Mr Gething said there had not been the “sharing of informatio­n” expected between the Department of Health and Wales.

“If the same informatio­n had been shared with us, then I think we could have been in a different position,” he said.

“What you then have to do is you’ve got to try and catch up with events and I certainly do wish we’d been able to move more speedily on not just changing our position, but on making sure that we had the testing ability to implement a new policy effectivel­y.”

Mr Gething said changing the policy but not “having the means to implement it” would have been a “really significan­t problem”.

He was also forced to defend being photograph­ed eating chips on a park bench during the pandemic, an event referred to as “chipgate” by Mr Poole.

The picture was published at a time when government guidance was to stay indoors and picnics were not allowed.

Mr Gething has always maintained that his actions were entirely within the rules, telling the hearing the food was eaten during a period of exercise which was allowed.

He has previously denied the Welsh Government subsequent­ly changed the rules to allow people to eat outside because of the incident.

He told the inquiry: “The rules said you could buy takeaway food, eat that and move on.”

He said the rules were changed then to make it easier to understand.

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