Labour is calling on the Government to release more
information to local authorities which they say will be of
“vital assistance” in containing local spread of coronavirus in
future.
The letter from Shadow Health Minister Justin Madders to
, who leads the
Government’s testing and tracing programme, sets out a series
of requests on testing data that they say is needed in local
areas.
, Labour’s Shadow
Health Minister, said:
“Councils are getting testing data which is sometimes nearly a
fortnight old and has such little information in it that it is
virtually useless in being able to spot and stop local
outbreaks.
“We are asking that positive test results are given to councils
on a daily basis, in real time if possible, and that there
should be sufficient information for them to be able to
identify the workplace if possible, where an outbreak has
occurred.
“The Government needs to be much more open and transparent with
local councils so that together we can catch local outbreaks
earlier and stop transmission of the virus.”
Ends
Notes
Full text of the letter:
Dear Dido Harding,
It is now more than two weeks since the Secretary of State,
, announced Leicester would
be the first city in the UK to be put under a local lockdown.
With restrictions expected to be reviewed this week, and
anticipated guidance regarding what might trigger further local
lockdowns expected, I am writing to ask that the concerns being
made by local authorities regarding the timing and detail of
the data they receive are recognised and resolved as a matter
of urgency.
Targeted local responses to coronavirus flare-ups are a key
part of the Government’s plan to contain the spread of the
virus and we know that the provision of complete and reliable
data is essential to effectively monitor local areas and assist
in that targeting. However, we are still hearing from local
authorities and public health officials that there are
significant gaps in the availability, quality and speed with
which data is being processed and provided by the various
organisations tasked with testing.
The Welsh government publishes Pillar 1 and 2 data daily, but
local authorities in England are still only receiving a weekly
breakdown of Pillar 1 and Pillar 2 tests, with regional data
being published every two weeks. Public health officials across
England have also raised concerns that even when they do
receive data that it is not easily accessible, with huge
amounts of testing data to decipher, and that it does not
include vital details on the ethnicity, post codes or
workplaces of people who have tested positive, nor the number
or proportion of the number of positive tests for each local
area. These gaps prevent local authorities from being able to
react with speed on the ground.
Local authorities are clear: the data is not detailed enough, not
accessible enough and not frequent enough.