,
Labour’s Shadow Health Secretary, responding to the Health
Secretary’s statement in the House of Commons, said:
The news that the South African variant has been identified in
eight different local authority areas spread nationwide is
alarming and suggests significant community transmission.
Can I ask him to run through the time-lines, when did these 11
cases test positive, how long does the genetic sequencing take
and when was he told of these cases?
Can these processes be made speedier? I’m told for example the
Ealing case tested positive in late December.
These variants bring into focus the importance of border
controls.
Times Radio has reported that hotel quarantine arrangements won’t
be in place till 15th February. Why the delay?
And according to the Times newspaper, SAGE warned two weeks ago
tougher quarantine restrictions for everyone entering the UK were
needed.
The government disputes this so will he publish the SAGE minutes
from 21st January?
I welcome the extra testing. Will all positive test results be
sent for sequencing?
Can I suggest he goes further;
People move about beyond their post code boundaries. They go
shopping, many still go to work.
Will he therefore roll out testing in neighbouring postcodes?
He wants to ‘come down hard’ on this variant, but isn’t the
lesson of mass testing, such as in Liverpool, that people are
hesitant to take a test if they aren’t compensated for any loss
of income associated with self-isolation?
We are fighting this virus with one hand tied behind our back,
asking the low paid to go hungry in order not to spread the
virus.
Transmission chains won’t be broken without decent sick pay and
isolation support.
We’ve seen the Kent B117 variant spread with speed. Now Public
Health England’s latest report identifies B117 sequences with the
E484K mutation seen in the South African variant.
It’s this mutation which is thought to be behind partial vaccine
evasion.
Further action is going to be needed.
Germany, Austria and France are recommending FFP2 facemasks on
public transport and shops. Will he now review the evidence and
look at this?
On Vaccination, again I congratulate the NHS, but not all care
homes with a Covid outbreak have been vaccinated yet. How many
homes are outstanding?
There have been reports of some care staff turning down
vaccination. Will he ensure the NHS collects data on the numbers
turning down vaccination so we can target and overcome vaccine
hesitancy more effectively?
Unicef have warned “Children are not the face of this pandemic.
But they risk being among its biggest victims” I accept it was
inevitable schools would close given community transmission
levels. But that doesn’t make it any less devastating.
We are depriving young people of social interaction, of play with
their friends.
Learning is not the same. Mental health problems are increasing.
There will be children locked in homes where violence or drink
abuse is prevalent.
Children’s health must always be a priority.
On his plans, how many teachers will be vaccinated as part of
bands 5-9? How many teachers and support staff will have to wait
until the period between Easter and Summer to be vaccinated?
Given last September it was reported that 25,000 teachers had
been off sick because of Covid, further disrupting children’s
learning, how will he ensure we don’t see the same disruption
again from March when its hoped schools return?
Finally, this is HIV Testing week, and over the weekend I
binge-watched It’s a Sin.
I was in tears.
Thankfully HIV is not a death sentence today.
People living with HIV are in phase 6 for vaccination but only if
they have disclosed their HIV status to their GP. Many haven’t
and still don’t want to because of the stigma we saw portrayed in
It’s a Sin.
Will he ensure that people living with HIV will be able to access
vaccination at their HIV clinic?