Mon, Dec 30, 2024 | Jumada al-Aakhirah 29, 1446 | DXB ktweather icon0°C

Coronavirus: UK was too slow on Covid-19 and 40,000 could die, professor says

Top Stories

United Kingdom, Boris Johnson, Anthony Costello, Alok Sharma, coronavirus, Covid-19

A man wearing a face mask getting on the bus as the spread of the coronavirus disease (Covid-19) continues, London, Britain, April 17, 2020.

London - More than 14,576 people with Covid-19 have died in British hospitals, though new official data indicates the true death toll could be much larger.

Published: Sun 19 Apr 2020, 1:44 AM

  • By
  • Reuters

The British government was too slow to react on several fronts to the novel coronavirus outbreak that could cause the deaths of 40,000 people in the United Kingdom, a leading public health professor told lawmakers on Friday.
Prime Minister Boris Johnson initially refrained from approving the stringent controls that other European leaders imposed but then closed down the country when projections showed a quarter of a million people could die in Britain.
So far, more than 14,576 people with Covid-19 have died in British hospitals, though new official data indicates the true death toll could be much larger.
"Where were the system errors that led us to have probably the highest death rates in Europe?" Anthony Costello, professor of International Child Health and Director of the UCL Institute for Global Health, asked at the Health and Social Care Committee.
"We have to face the reality of that: We were too slow with a number of things," Costello told the committee. "We could see 40,000 deaths by the time it's over."
Costello, a paediatrician who is an expert in epidemiology, said the government should make sure its response to the second and additional waves of infection was not too slow.
The government also faced separate criticism over its supply of Personal Protective Equipment (PPE) for health workers.
The Guardian newspaper said shortages meant guidelines were being relaxed, and that doctors might need to treat patients without wearing full-length protective gowns.
Ministers on Friday acknowledged a shortage of gowns - departing from their position that there were adequate supplies of PPE but some logistical problems getting it to where it was needed. The health department did not immediately comment on the Guardian report.
Britain has the fifth-highest official death toll from Covid-19 in the world, after the United States, Italy, Spain and France, though the UK figure only covers hospital fatalities and the real number is probably much higher.
British ministers have defended their response to the outbreak, saying they followed scientific advice and have responded with urgency in what amounts to a war-like situation.
Costello said the United Kingdom needed wide-scale testing and the right systems in place to deal with further flare-ups of the outbreak.
"The recent estimates, even from the chief scientific officer, is that after this wave - we could see 40,000 deaths by the time it's over - we could only have maybe 10 per cent, 15 per cent of the population infected or covered," he said.
"So the idea of herd immunity would mean another five, six waves maybe in order to get to 60 per cent," he said. "We have got to pray the vaccinologists come up."
The government launched a new initiative on Friday to coordinate British efforts to find a vaccine, although business minister Alok Sharma said any such solution would take many months and refused to set out a timetable.
COVID-19 TESTING
Health minister Matt Hancock said mass community testing was part of the British strategy, though the government has yet to find an antibody test that is accurate enough to be used.
"It is part of the strategy - we will be introducing it when we can," he told the parliamentary committee.
He said testing was being expanded to include the police, the fire service, prison staff, critical local authority staff, the judiciary, and the work and pensions ministry.
Hancock was also questioned by lawmakers about the daily death toll data - which gives hospital deaths but ignores deaths at home or in care homes.
Hancock said the rate of deaths due to Covid-19 in care homes was higher than the 2 per cent of the total indicated by official data, adding he was concerned about how the novel coronavirus was spreading in places housing vulnerable people.
"We do know the number of people who die outside hospital and they very largely die at home," he said.



Next Story