,
Shadow Health and Social Care Secretary, responding to the
Government’s Covid-19 health statement in the House today, said:
"Mr Speaker we welcome the restrictions the government are
imposing.
In recent days cases have risen sharply and across all age
groups.
Hospital admissions are up around 70% since the low point in
August.
The Kings College Covid study estimates the R value in England is
at 1.2.
Everything reasonable must be done for maximum suppression of
this virus.
Everyone wants to avoid a second national lockdown.
Lockdowns extracts a heavy social and economic price on this
already suffering from inequality. And on World Suicide
Prevention Day we must remember the mental health impact of
lockdown.
Can I ask him again about schools:
We have examples across the country of classes and year groups –
including in Leicester – of hundreds, possibly thousands, of
pupils starting the new term as they finished the last term, at
home and not in education.
Is it the policy of the government that if there are 1 or 2
positive cases in a year group that the whole year group is sent
home for two weeks? And if so, are parents and carers eligible
for sick pay and financial support?
We were promised a world beating test, trace and isolate regime
by now.
I highlighted its performance in finding contacts in Tuesday’s
figures.
He said I had muddled my figures. FullFact said I was right and
he was wrong.
I will leave him to judge whether he wants to correct the record
but I just want him to correct Test and Trace.
In one study, researchers found 75% of people with infections did
not adhere with self isolation. I know he’s piloting extra
support but we need a system urgently so those who are low paid
and in insecure work can isolate.
Which brings me to testing.
There are many stories.
In Bradford a mum tried to get test for her eight-year-old
asthmatic son but was told to go to Scotland.
Yesterday he was touring TV studios trying to dampen demand even
though he previously told this House in July “if you have
symptoms, if in doubt, get a test”.
So having encouraged these tests, with 8 million pupils return to
schools, with thousands going back to workplaces, surely it was
obvious there would be extra demand on the system. It’s not the
fault of ill people asking for tests, it’s his fault not
providing them. Again no apology from him today. Why didn’t he
plan extra resource capacity to process tests?
So having failed to provide tests to all those who are ill, and
of course with the waiting list for diagnostics tests, now at 1.2
million the highest on record, he now wants to deliver 10 million
tests a day – his so called Project Moon Shot.
I’ve long been pushing him for strategic mass testing. From the
start the WHO told us ‘test, test, test’
But we are all fed up of big undelivered promises and
‘world-beaters.’
Mass testing is too important to become another failed project –
it’s all well and good talking about moonshots and the Prime
Minister telling us all we’ll be tested every morning. Even
better would be simply delivering the extra testing needed now,
not just headline figures.
So first of all what is the timeline?
The Prime Minister told the nation he wants this in place by the
Spring.
Though the Chief Scientific Advisor pointed out its "completely
wrong to assume this is a slam dunk that can definitely happen."
How quickly will the pilots in Salford and Southampton be
assessed?
Secondly what is the cost?
According to the British Medical Journal £100 billion. Is this
figure correct?
If not, can he tell the House what estimate he has made of the
cost of processing 10 million tests every day would be and how
much has been allocated to his moon shot efforts?
Thirdly who will deliver it?
What discussion has he had with universities like Leicester who
are piloting LAMP based saliva testing for all students?
There are many smaller firms that are keen to engage with the
government.
Yet its reported that that agreements or understandings have
already been signed with GSK, Serco and G4S to deliver project
moon shot?
Is this correct? What procurement processes have been undertaken?
Fourthly who are the priorities?
We’re still not testing the loved ones of care home residents who
are desperate to see relatives.
When will the government deliver routine testing of all frontline
NHS staff?
Mr Speaker, Effective testing depends on quick turnaround and
people need to access tests locally.
It depends on expanded contact tracing and isolation.
Honesty about the risks of false positives must be built into the
process.
But this isn’t even happening now when capacity is supposed to be
175,000.
Given the testing fiasco of recent days how on earth does he
expect to hit his moon shot in the future?"