Monday 20 April 2020

Official - We Are Up Shit Creek!

Blimey! A right-leaning Sunday newspaper that's owned by an ageing overseas right wing millionaire publishes a highly-critical article about a lying right wing government and prime minister. Proper journalism you might think? Hell, yes! Why, it's such a shock to our democratic system of unwritten constitutional checks and balances I notice civil servants were instructed to spend all day Sunday preparing an official government response:-    

Response to Sunday Times Insight article

A Government spokesman said: ‘This article contains a series of falsehoods and errors and actively misrepresents the enormous amount of work which was going on in government at the earliest stages of the Coronavirus outbreak.’

‘This is an unprecedented global pandemic and we have taken the right steps at the right time to combat it, guided at all times by the best scientific advice.

‘The Government has been working day and night to battle against coronavirus, delivering a strategy designed at all times to protect our NHS and save lives.

'Our response has ensured that the NHS has been given all the support it needs to ensure everyone requiring treatment has received it, as well as providing protection to businesses and reassurance to workers.

‘The Prime Minister has been at the helm of the response to this, providing leadership during this hugely challenging period for the whole nation.’

On the Sunday Times claims:

Claim – On the third Friday in January Coronavirus was already spreading around the world but the government ‘brushed aside’ the threat in an hour-long COBR meeting and said the risk to the UK public was ‘low’.

Response – At a very basic level, this is wrong. The meeting was on the fourth Friday in January. The article also misrepresents the Government’s awareness of Covid 19, and the action we took before this point. Health Secretary Matt Hancock was first alerted to Covid 19 on 3 January and spoke to Departmental officials on 6th Jan before receiving written advice from the UK Health Security Team.

He brought the issue to the attention of the Prime Minister and they discussed Covid 19 on 7 January. The government’s scientific advisory groups started to meet in mid-January and Mr Hancock instituted daily coronavirus meetings. He updated Parliament as soon as possible, on January 23rd.

The risk level was set to “Low” because at the time our scientific advice was that the risk level to the UK public at that point was low. The first UK case was not until 31 January. The specific meaning of “public health risk” refers to the risk there is to the public at precisely that point. The risk was also higher than it had been before - two days earlier it had been increased “Very Low” to “Low” in line with clinical guidance from the Chief Medical Officer.

The WHO did not formally declare that coronavirus was a Public Health Emergency of International Concern (PHEIC) until 30 January, and only characterised it as a global pandemic more than a month later, on 11 March. The UK was taking action and working to improve its preparedness from early January.

Claim - ‘This was despite the publication that day of an alarming study by Chinese doctors in the medical journal The Lancet. It assessed the lethal potential of the virus, for the first time suggesting it was comparable to the 1918 Spanish flu pandemic, which killed up to 50 million people.'

Response - The editor of the Lancet, on exactly the same day – 23 January - called for “caution” and accused the media of ‘escalating anxiety by talking of a ‘killer virus’ and ‘growing fears’. He wrote: ‘In truth, from what we currently know, 2019-nCoV has moderate transmissibility and relatively low pathogenicity. There is no reason to foster panic with exaggerated language.’ The Sunday Times is suggesting that there was a scientific consensus around the fact that this was going to be a pandemic – that is plainly untrue.

https://twitter.com/richardhorton1/status/1220606842449072128?s=19

Claim - It was unusual for the Prime Minister to be absent from COBR and is normally chaired by the Prime Minister.

Response - This is wrong. It is entirely normal and proper for COBR to be chaired by the relevant Secretary of State. Then Health Secretary Alan Johnson chaired COBR in 2009 during H1N1. Michael Gove chaired COBR as part of No Deal planning. Transport Secretary Grant Shapps chaired COBR during the collapse of Thomas Cook. Mr Hancock was in constant communication with the PM throughout this period.

At this point the World Health Organisation had not declared COVID19 a ‘Public Health Emergency of International Concern’, and only did so only 30 January. Indeed, they chose not to declare a PHEIC the day after the COBR meeting.

Examples of scientific commentary from the time:

Prof Martin Hibberd, Professor of Emerging Infectious Disease, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, said:

“This announcement is not surprising as more evidence may be needed to make the case of announcing a PHEIC. WHO were criticised after announcing the pandemic strain of novel H1N1_2009, when the virus was eventually realised to have similar characteristics to seasonal influenza and is perhaps trying to avoid making the same mistake here with this novel coronavirus. To estimate the true severity of this new disease requires identifying mild or asymptomatic cases, if there are any, while determining the human to human transmission rate might require more evidence.”

Dr Adam Kamradt-Scott, Senior Lecturer in International Security Studies, University of Sydney, said: “Based on the information we have to date, the WHO Director-General’s decision to not declare a Public Health Emergency of International Concern is not especially surprising. While we have seen international spread of the virus, which is one of the criteria for declaring a PHEIC, the cases in those countries do not appear to have seeded further local outbreaks. If that was to start to occur, it would constitute a greater concern but at the moment the outbreak is largely contained within China.”

Claim - 'Imperial’s Ferguson was already working on his own estimate — putting infectivity at 2.6 and possibly as high as 3.5 — which he sent to ministers and officials in a report on the day of the Cobra meeting on January 24. The Spanish flu had an estimated infectivity rate of between 2.0 and 3.0, so Ferguson’s finding was shocking.’

Response - Infectivity on its own simply reveals how quickly a disease spreads, and not its health impact. For that, it is necessary to know about data such as associated mortality/morbidity. It is sloppy and unscientific to use this number alone to compare to Spanish flu.

Claim - No10 ‘played down the looming threat’ from Coronavirus and displayed an ‘almost nonchalant attitude…for more than a month.’

Response - The suggestion that the government’s attitude was nonchalant is wrong. Extensive and detailed work was going on in government because of Coronavirus, as shown above.

Claim - By the time the Prime Minister chaired a COBR meeting on March 2 ‘the virus had sneaked into our airports, our trains, our workplaces and our homes. Britain was on course for one of the worst infections of the most insidious virus to have hit the world in a century.'

Response - This virus has hit countries across the world. It is ridiculous to suggest that coronavirus only reached the UK because the Health Secretary and not the PM chaired a COBR meeting.

Claim - 'Failure of leadership' by anonymous senior advisor to Downing Street.

Response - The Prime Minister has been at the helm of the Government response to Covid 19, providing the leadership to steer his Ministerial team through a hugely challenging period for the whole nation. This anonymous source is variously described as a ‘senior adviser to Downing Street’ and a ‘senior Downing Street adviser’. The two things are not the same. One suggests an adviser employed by the government in No10. The other someone who provides ad hoc advice. Which is it?

Claim - The government sent 279,000 items of its depleted stockpile of protective equipment to China during this period in response to a request for help from the authorities there.

Response - The equipment was not from the pandemic stockpile. We provided this equipment to China at the height of their need and China has since reciprocated our donation many times over. Between April 2-April 15 we have received over 12 million pieces of PPE in the UK from China.

Claim - Little was done to equip the National Health Service for the coming crisis in this period.

Response - This is wrong. The NHS has responded well to Coronavirus, and has provided treatment to everyone in critical need. We have constructed the new Nightingale hospitals and extended intensive care capacity in other hospitals.

Claim - Among the key points likely to be explored are why it took so long to recognise an urgent need for a massive boost in supplies of personal protective equipment (PPE) for health workers; ventilators to treat acute respiratory symptoms; and tests to detect the infection.

Response - The Department for Health began work on boosting PPE stocks in January, before the first confirmed UK case.
Discussions on PPE supply for COVID-19 began w/c 27 January (as part of Medical Devices and Clinical Consumables), with the first supply chain kick-off meeting on 31 January. The first additional orders of PPE was placed on 30 January via NHS Supply Chain’s ‘just-in-time contracts’. BAU orders of PPE were ramped up around the same date.
Friday, 7 February, the department held a webinar for suppliers trading from or via China and the European Union. Over 700 delegates joined and heard the Department’s requests to carry out full supply chain risk assessments and hold onto EU exit stockpiles where they had been retained.
Monday, 10 February, the department spoke with the major patient groups and charities to update them on the situation regarding the outbreak and to update them on the steps it was taking to protect supplies.
Tuesday, 11 February, the department wrote to all suppliers in scope of the Covid 19 supply response work – those trading from or via China or the EU – repeating the messages from the webinar and updating suppliers on the current situation relating to novel coronavirus.
The NHS has spare ventilator capacity and we are investing in further capacity.

Claim - Suggestion that ‘lack of grip’ had the knock-on effect of the national lockdown being introduced days or even weeks too late, causing many thousands more unnecessary deaths.

Response - The government started to act as soon as it was alerted to a potential outbreak. Mr Hancock was first alerted to Covid 19 on 3 January and spoke to Departmental officials on 6th Jan before receiving written advice from the UK Health Security Team. He brought the issue to the attention of the Prime Minister and they discussed Covid 19 on 7 January.

The government’s scientific advisory groups started to meet in mid-January and Hancock instituted daily meetings to grip the emerging threat. We have taken the right steps at the right time guided by the scientific evidence.

Claim - Scientists said the threat from the coming storm was clear and one of the government’s key advisory committees was given a dire warning a month earlier than has previously been admitted about the prospect of having to deal with mass casualties.

Response - The government followed scientific advice at all times. The WHO only determined that COVID 19 would be a global pandemic on 11 March. Claiming that there was scientific consensus on this is just wrong. Sage met on January 22 but the first NERVTAG meeting was held on 13 January (NERVTAG is the New and Emerging Respiratory Virus Threats Advisory Group – see here https://www.gov.uk/government/groups/new-and-emerging-respiratory-virus-threats-advisory-group ).

Claim - The last rehearsal for a pandemic was a 2016 exercise codenamed Cygnus, which predicted the health service would collapse and highlighted a long list of shortcomings — including, presciently, a lack of PPE and intensive care ventilators.

Response - The Government has been extremely proactive in implementing lessons learnt around pandemic preparedness, including from Exercise Cygnus. This includes being ready with legislative proposals that could rapidly be tailored to what became the Coronavirus Act, plans to strengthen excess death planning, planning for recruitment and deployment of retired staff and volunteers, and guidance for stakeholders and sectors across government.

Claim - By February 21 the virus had already infected 76,000 people, had caused 2,300 deaths in China and was taking a foothold in Europe, with Italy recording 51 cases and two deaths the following day. Nonetheless NERVTAG, one of the key government advisory committees, decided to keep the threat level at “moderate”.

Response - This is a misrepresentation of what the threat level is. This is about the current public health danger – and on February 21, when the UK had about a dozen confirmed cases, out of a population of over 66 million, the actual threat to individuals was moderate. In terms of the potential threat, the government was clear – on 10 February the Secretary of State declared that “the incidence or transmission of novel Coronavirus constituted a serious and imminent threat to public health”.

31 comments:

  1. This Govt is a dire, desperate pack of weasly pompous wannabes with deep pockets they want to fill and no shame as to how they keep it that way.

    Speaking of the Lying State - i notice russell webster is the new chosen one, the preferred propaganda vessel for unchallenged hmpps spin.

    I keep diggin' on James Brown!

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    1. He always has been.

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    2. RW has done some great stuff, but I do find the unchallenged funnelling of HMPPS sugarpill drool more than a bit irritating.

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  2. Man down t’ virtual pub thinks while the govt acts to remove lockdown to protect economy, Joe Public to prepare for second wave of virus.

    Meanwhile the NPsBirmingham Bronze Commander & managers play dressing up games. Is this really why they’re being paid £1500 per month bonuses for leading from the front(room)?

    https://mobile.twitter.com/NpsBirmingham/status/1251040540424101888

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    1. And are all NPS/HMPPS senior staff involved in such trivial nonsense? Isn't it a formal account on company time? Shouldn't the twattery of such idiots be limited to personal social media accounts?

      Is there a case to say their actions are bringing the NPS into disrepute? Amy? Jo? Whaddya say?

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    2. "All week, Birmingham management team Skype tea breaks have been enlivened by the introduction of hats. Yesterday, a sea captain went head to head with the mother of the bride and a unicorn. Anticipation bristles for the grand finale." #No1ForMillinery

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    3. I have also heard of this in the North East area. Thankfully not my team. I don’t get it. Whilst I appreciate trying to keep spirits up, I also hold the view that wearing hats for Skype meetings, or Easter Egg competitions is an absolute joke. It just shows how out of touch certain sections of this organisation are. It’s an embarrassment

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  3. US & european news channels are loving the Sunday Times report. UK govt portrayed as hapless amateurs - not too far from the truth - with Johnson spending early part of 2020 "hiding in grace & favour country house with girlfriend planning how to break the pregnancy news", and UK population seen to be suffering as a consequence.

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  4. PPE given to China wasn't from our stockpiles?
    So why are we struggling so much with PPE now if they were aware of the threat and acted swiftly to build stockpiles?
    Total lies.
    We've given PPE supplies to China and our own NHS are struggling to cope with PPE shortages.
    Fake news and alternative facts?

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    1. Hansard, 4 Feb 2020


      Andrew Rosindell (Romford) (Con) - "5. What recent discussions he has had with his Chinese counterpart on the situation in Wuhan." [900589]

      The Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs and First Secretary of State (Dominic Raab) - "I spoke to Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi on 28 January about the evacuation of UK nationals from Wuhan and also about UK medical supplies to help the Chinese authorities tackle the coronavirus."
      _____________

      While we're on the subject of fibs:

      Hansard 23 jan 2020 - Matt Hancock

      The chief medical officer has revised the risk to the UK population from “very low” to “low”, and has concluded that while there is an increased likelihood that cases may arise in this country, we are well prepared and well equipped to deal with them. *** The UK is one of the first countries to have developed a world-leading test for the new coronavirus.***

      ???So where's this world-leading test, Matt???

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    2. Hansard Lords 11 Feb 2020

      Baroness Blackwood - "We are one of the first countries in the world to have an effective test; it is working well. Now that the protocols have been sent to the devolved Administrations, testing centres in Glasgow, Edinburgh, Cardiff and Belfast have started testing already. Labs in Cambridge, Bristol and Manchester have started testing today and ​Birmingham, Newcastle and Southampton will come online shortly"

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    3. Hansard Lords 11 Feb 2020

      The insightful Lord Patel (cross bencher):

      "As far as a vaccine is concerned, it takes a long time to develop a vaccine; when you develop one, it takes even longer to see whether it is effective.

      Last time we discussed this, I said that the Government were taking a proportionate action to contain the virus in the United Kingdom. I believe that to be so even today. However, we might be on the knife edge of a pandemic. If a pandemic is declared, the whole attitude to how we contain this changes. It becomes much more draconian, to stop the movement of people, isolate the index cases and identify the contacts."

      Sadly the govt decided against isolating index cases & tracing contacts because, despite claiming to have a 'world-leading test', there was no testing programme to support that approach.

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    4. If people can become infected again after having Covid19, is a vaccine of much practical use?

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    5. No-one seems to know, but more importantly they don't know yet if re-infection is possible, e.g. chicken pox/shingles, or if its just latent virus 'hiding' in tissues of organs e.g. heart, kidneys.

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  5. https://www.google.com/amp/s/amp.theguardian.com/world/live/2020/apr/20/uk-coronavirus-live-boris-johnson-against-lifting-lockdown-over-second-wave-fears

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  6. For the past 10 years the Government has managed, everytime they found themselves facing difficult questions, to spin it around and blame Labour for everything.
    It's just not possible to do that with the current crisis being caused by the pandemic.
    What happens now, and what happens next all belongs to Johnson and co. It puts them in an unusual position of having to take ownership in full of all the decisions they take without being able to spin it back on, or point the finger at the opposition.
    They must feel very uncomfortable to be in that position right now?
    Only guessing, but I'd bet someone around the cabinet table might have uttered the words "wish Corbyn had won that last f***ing election".

    'Getafix

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    1. That’s so true. I bet the likes of Johnsons are regretting the outcome of the election. Also there is so used to shifting the blame onto other people you’re quite right this will be the first time they will have to take ownership for their own decisions.

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  7. If you thought the Chinese have been using sleight of hand & withholding information, try this from New Scientist:

    "Key scientific data and advice the UK government is using to guide its covid-19 response won’t be published until the pandemic ends. Documents used to make decisions and the minutes of meetings of the Scientific Advisory Group on Emergencies (SAGE) will only be made public when the current outbreak is brought under control, according to Patrick Vallance, the government’s chief scientific adviser."

    https://www.newscientist.com/article/2241082-uks-coronavirus-science-advice-wont-be-published-until-pandemic-ends/

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  8. https://insidetime.org/exclusive-interview-my-first-priority-is-safety/

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  9. It seems some time since we have had any news on deaths and Covid related illness to prison staff and prisoners. The figures are being calculated but don't appear to be published on a regular basis.

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    1. Maybe The BlairWeasel knows? He seems to know everything else.

      I thought/hoped that when he buggered off he'd stay away counting his ill-gotten gains but alas, no, weasel is as weasel does. Weaseling his way on t'telly with words he thinks are 'wisely' but we know they're 'weasly'.

      Piss off Anthony. You're not wanted by anyone on this island anymore.

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  10. BBC News.

    Ex-Home Office chief Sir Philip Rutnam has lodged an employment tribunal claim for unfair dismissal and whistleblowing against Home Secretary Priti Patel.

    A statement from the civil servants union the FDA said Sir Philip formally began legal action on Monday.

    Sir Philip resigned in February amid bullying claims against Mrs Patel, which she denies.

    A government spokesperson said: "We do not comment on ongoing legal proceedings."

    Mrs Patel has not commented publicly on the allegations against her, but government sources have said she denies them.

    At the time of his resignation, Sir Philip, who was the Home Office's most senior official, said there had been a "vicious and orchestrated" campaign against him.

    Announcing the legal action, FDA general secretary Dave Penman said in a statement: "Following his (Sir Philip's) resignation, the FDA instructed Gavin Mansfield QC, head of Littleton Chambers and employment law specialist, as counsel to advise Sir Philip, supported by Clive Howard, senior principal lawyer, employment and partnership at Slater and Gordon.

    "This morning, Sir Philip, with the support of his legal team and the FDA, submitted a claim to the employment tribunal for unfair (constructive) dismissal and whistleblowing against the home secretary.

    "Sir Philip will not be making any further comment at this time."

    A Cabinet Office investigation was launched in March over whether Mrs Patel had breached the ministerial code, amid the bullying allegations.

    The prime minister also gave Mrs Patel his support.

    In an email to Home Office staff last month, Mrs Patel said she regretted Sir Philip's resignation.

    She thanked him for his service but said it was "now time for the Home Office to come together as one team".

    She said she "deeply cared" about the "wellbeing" of her civil servants and valued their professionalism.

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  11. The number of prison staff who have tested positive for Covid-19 rose 40% in three days, a daily update from the Ministry of Justice shows.

    As at 5pm on Sunday, 194 prison staff across 53 prisons were confirmed to have contracted the coronavirus, compared with 138 in the last available figures for Thursday.

    The number of prisoners who had tested positive for Covid-19 increased 9% in the same period to 278 inmates across 64 prisons. There are around 81,500 prisoners in England and Wales, in 117 prisons.

    A total of 13 prisoners are known to have contracted Covid-19 and died, including one inmate who died within prison walls.

    The government recently announced an extension of testing to prison and probation staff.

    The Prison Service is to temporarily release up to 4,000 inmates who are within two months of their release date, as well as build 500 cells within the existing prison estate to increase single-cell occupancy.

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  12. I have no problems with the LDU heads getting the extra £1500. Like I keep saying, if you get to the top table and become brass then you've done your bit and now it's time to get paid. That's why I want to get into management. You get paid more! Those who still dont get it never will. If you stay at the coalface all your career, then well done you, but it means you wont get top dollar so donf moan when the big dogs get paid.

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    1. "Like I keep saying, if you get to the top table and become brass then you've done your bit and now it's time to get paid."
      Not true I'm afraid. There are some great managers don't get me wrong. But there are also a lot that have managed to get to that position so quickly they don't know their arse from their elbow.
      If you're ambitious that's OK. But don't think that the further up the greasey pole you get the better at the job you become. It's often just the opposite.

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    2. 20:51 It’s not all about money. For you it may be about money that’s why in my view you will most definitely struggle.

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    3. Nice one 20:51. I was trying to fathom whether you were a stooge or just an a-hole. Got it now. Thanks.

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  13. “ there are also a lot that have managed to get to that position so quickly they don't know their arse from their elbow.” - lol Beautifully said. Not to mention the incompetence of the so-called managers.

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  14. I have posted a few times (with examples) referring to the Tories - and others with similar behavioural traits - as Revisionistas, i.e. those who rewrite history to suit THEIR narrative, to avoid or distract from responsibility &/or to claim 'success'.

    Et Voila:

    "The editor of a top medical journal has accused the government of "deliberately rewriting history" over its handling of the coronavirus pandemic.

    Richard Horton, editor of The Lancet, accused ministers of waging an "ongoing Covid-19 disinformation campaign."

    Horton made the accusation in a scathing tweet, in which he included a section of a government statement in defence of its coronavirus response.

    The statement was released at the weekend in response to a damning analysis in the Sunday Times, which accused Boris Johnson of failing to take the outbreak seriously and reacting too slowly.

    The statement from the Department for Health comprised a highly unusual rebuttal of the article, titled Response to Sunday Times Insight article, saying the piece "contains a series of falsehoods and errors".

    It specifically referred to a previous tweet by Horton, in which he called for "caution" in media reports of the virus

    The statement reads: "The editor of the Lancet... called for 'caution' and accused the media of 'escalating anxiety by talking of a 'killer virus' and 'growing fears'."

    Horton argued that the statement failed to mention the rest of his tweets, where he warned of the "dangers of this new disease."

    The Sunday Times article accused Boris Johnson and his ministers of "missing the boat on testing and PPE".

    The article also claimed the Johnson administration "just watched" as the death toll mounted in Wuhan, China.

    Downing Street denied the claims, saying: "This is an unprecedented global pandemic and we have taken the right steps at the right time to combat it, guided at all times by the best scientific advice.

    "The government has been working day and night to battle against coronavirus, delivering a strategy designed at all times to protect our NHS and save lives.

    "Our response has ensured that the NHS has been given all the support it needs to ensure everyone requiring treatment has received it, as well as providing protection to businesses and reassurance to workers.

    "The Prime Minister has been at the helm of the response to this, providing leadership during this hugely challenging period for the whole nation."

    After the publication, shadow health secretary Jonathan Ashworth told Sky News: "There are serious questions as to why the Prime Minister skipped five Cobra meetings throughout February, when the whole world could see how serious this was becoming.

    "And we know that serious mistakes have been made, we know that our frontline NHS staff don't have the PPE, that they've been told this weekend that they won't necessarily have the gowns which are vital to keep them safe. We know that our testing capacity is not at the level that is needed."

    https://twitter.com/richardhorton1/status/1252183975893884933

    Chapeau!

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    1. In fact it looks like this administration have pissed off a lot of eminent professionals:

      "A call has been made for the Government's medical advisers to resign as criticism over its handling of the coronavirus pandemic continues.

      There was anger from health experts after Dr Jenny Harries, England's deputy chief medical officer, claimed the UK has been an "international exemplar in preparedness" during the pandemic.

      Her comments during Sunday's daily government briefing came despite ongoing concerns about low numbers of Covid-19 testing and a lack of personal protective equipment for NHS staff.

      Professor Anthony Costello, director of University College London's Institute for Global Health, tweeted: "Deputy CMO Jenny Harries still believes that testing policy in the UK has been correct.

      "And she doesn't understand links between tests and #Covid death rates. Is this #CMO policy? If so, they should resign."

      According to the Government, the UK carried out 21,626 tests on Saturday, far short of its long-stated target of 100,000 per day by the end of this month.

      In comparison, an estimated 50,000 tests for coronavirus are carried out in Germany each day.

      But Dr Harries defended the UK's approach, saying it and Germany are at "different phases" of the pandemic.

      "We had and we still have a very clear plan - we had a containment phase and it was very successful," she said.

      Meanwhile, Richard Horton, the editor of medical journal The Lancet, criticised the Government's advisers, accused them of telling "manifest untruths".

      In a tweet posted on Sunday evening, he wrote: "When you see supposedly independent medical advisors to government tell what are manifest untruths to shore up a political regime whose credibility is rapidly collapsing, you have to say that those advisors have lost their integrity and our trust."

      There has been anger from NHS officials over a continued lack of personal protective equipment (PPE) for health workers, while a report in the Sunday Times claimed the government dithered in its response to the coronavirus crisis.

      Of those hospitalised in the UK who tested positive for coronavirus, 16,060 have died, according to the Government.

      At the end of last month, Horton criticised Dr Harries after she claimed the UK had a "perfectly adequate supply of PPE".

      Writing in The Lancet, he said: "I am sure Dr Harries believed what she said. But she was wrong and she should apologise to the thousands of health workers who still have no access to WHO-standard PPE."

      On Sunday, Dr Harries said: "The UK, regardless of the position that we may be in now, has been an international exemplar in preparedness."

      The lack of PPE has been repeatedly raised by NHS officials, as some staff are forced to use washing equipment and have been asked to accept wearing less protective gear.

      Chris Hopson, chief executive of NHS Providers, said there was "relatively low confidence" that a shipment of 400,000 surgical gowns which had been due to arrive in the UK from Turkey on Sunday would make its way into the country on Monday.

      Hopson told BBC Radio 4's Today programme that it was wrong to focus on individual consignments of PPE because "bitter experience over the last few weeks" has shown they cannot be relied upon, with some boxes containing the wrong items and thousands of pieces missing.

      "There's no doubt that at the moment, we have now got trusts that have definitely got shortages of gowns," he said.

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    2. https://www.thenation.com/article/world/brexit-infected-britain-coronavirus/

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