Health

Matt Hancock reveals deaths of 19 NHS workers amid PPE row


The health secretary, Matt Hancock, has revealed that 19 UK health workers have died after contracting coronavirus, amid further backlash over his request that NHS staff do not overuse protective equipment.

Hancock said on Saturday he was unaware of any link between the deaths and a lack of personal protective equipment (PPE) but an investigation would be carried out into the extent to which health workers had caught the virus on the frontline.

He told Sky News his “heart goes out to their families” and it was “heart-rending” that such a high proportion of the victims were people who migrated to the UK to work for the NHS.

On Friday Hancock urged the public to “treat PPE as the precious resource it is” following weeks of criticism over the lack of vital equipment.

The Royal College of Nursing (RCN) dismissed any suggestions that healthcare staff are abusing or overusing PPE. The RCN’s general secretary, Dame Donna Kinnair, told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme on Saturday that no PPE was “more precious a resource than a healthcare worker’s life, a nurse’s life, a doctor’s life”.

Speaking later on BBC Breakfast, Kinnair said she was hearing from nurses every day that they did not have enough protective equipment.


She said: “I take offence actually that we are saying that healthcare workers are abusing or overusing PPE. I think what we know is, we don’t have enough supply and not enough regular supply of PPE.

“This is the number one priority nurses are bringing to my attention. That they do not have adequate supply of protective equipment.”

The Labour leader, Keir Starmer, said it was insulting to suggest frontline healthcare workers were wasting PPE. He tweeted: “There are horrific stories of NHS staff and care workers not having the equipment they need to keep them safe. The government must act to ensure supplies are delivered.”

The government has urged the public to stay home over the Easter holiday to slow the spread of the coronavirus. On Friday the UK recorded its worst daily fatality rate since the outbreak began, with 980 people announced to have died in hospitals in the preceding 24 hours. This brought the total to 8,958.

A British scientist has said a coronavirus vaccine could be ready as soon as September. Sarah Gilbert, a professor of vaccinology at Oxford University, told the Times she was “80% confident” the vaccine being developed by her team would work, and human trials were due to begin in the next fortnight.

She said: “I think there’s a high chance that it will work based on other things that we have done with this type of vaccine. It’s not just a hunch and as every week goes by we have more data to look at … I would go for 80%. That’s my personal view.”

Most industry experts say said a vaccine could take as long as 18 months to be developed and distributed globally. However, Gilbert believes letting volunteers from places that have not imposed lockdowns become infected naturally as soon as possible will accelerate the clinical trial process.

She said: “If one of those [places] turns out to have a high rate of virus transmission then we will get our efficacy results very quickly, so that is one strategy for reducing the time.

“Total lockdowns do make it harder. But we don’t want the herd immunity either. We want them to be susceptible and exposed for the trials purely to test the efficacy.”

For the vaccine to be distributed in the autumn, Gilbert said the government would need to start production before it was proven to work. “We don’t want to get to later this year and discover we have a highly effective vaccine and we haven’t got any vaccine to use.”





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