Step
up COVID-19 testing, tracking, lawmakers criticise UK
response
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[May 19, 2020]
LONDON (Reuters) - Britain must step up its
testing and tracking to help tackle the coronavirus crisis, lawmakers
said on Tuesday, criticising the government for dropping a programme to
check for COVID-19 in March and not moving fast enough to build it up.
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In a letter to Prime Minister Boris Johnson, Greg Clark, chairman of
the parliamentary science and technology committee, listed some of
their findings, suggesting there was a lack of transparency over
scientific advice and decisions on testing.
Johnson, who repeats that the government is following scientific
advice in its response to the coronavirus outbreak, has come under
fire for being slow on testing, for failing to provide protective
equipment and for sacrificing care homes.
The government, the letter said, must learn the lessons from the
slowness on testing.
"One of the most significant problems of the handling of the
pandemic to date in the United Kingdom has been the lack of capacity
to test people to determine whether they have COVID-19," Clark wrote
in the letter.
"Very low numbers of people were being tested well into March, with
the number of tests actually falling at a critical time to 1,215 on
March 10."
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He also said a decision to concentrate testing in a limited number of
laboratories and expand it gradually rather than boosting capacity by using
other laboratories was "one of the most consequential made during this crisis".
Work and Pensions minister Thérèse Coffey said testing capacity was limited at
the start of the outbreak, but this had been rapidly expanded "from a standing
start" since.
For the letter:
https://publications.parliament.uk/
pa/cm5801/cmselect/
cmsctech/correspondence/200518-Chair-to-Prime-Minister-re-COVID-19-pandemic-some-lessons-learned-so-far.pdf
(Reporting by Elizabeth Piper; editing by Michael Holden)
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