UK's
'policy approach of fatalism' early in pandemic was major error,
lawmakers say
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[October 12, 2021]
LONDON (Reuters) - The delay to England's
first coronavirus lockdown was a serious error based on groupthink that
went unchallenged, lawmakers said in a report published on Tuesday,
adding that failures in testing positive cases and tracing their
contacts exacerbated the crisis.
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Parliament's health and science committees have jointly published a
150-page report on lessons learnt from the COVID-19 pandemic after
hours of testimony from more than 50 witnesses, include government
policy, health and science advisers.
Deficiencies in the COVID-19 response in Britain have been laid out
in a series of Reuters special reports, including about delays in
the decision to lock down , shortcomings in the test and trace
system and errors that led to the spread of the pandemic in care
homes.
The lawmaker report highlighted concerns about all three, adding
there was a "policy approach of fatalism" that sought to manage but
not suppress COVID-19 infections in the early stages of the
pandemic, which it described as a "serious error".
"Our test and trace programme took too long to become effective. The
Government took seriously scientific advice but there should have
been more challenge from all to the early UK consensus that delayed
a more comprehensive lockdown," lawmakers Jeremy Hunt and Greg
Clark, who led the committees behind the report, said.
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Britain has reported 137,763
deaths within 28 days of a positive COVID-19
test result, the eighth highest coronavirus
death toll in the world.
The report said the rollout of COVID-19 vaccines
was well planned and executed, but warned that
overall, lessons would need to be learned to
avoid repeating mistakes, and recommended more
focus on pandemic contingency planning.
"The UK’s response, with the notable exception
of vaccine development and deployment, has for
the most part been too reactive as opposed to
anticipatory," the report said.
(Reporting by Alistair Smout; Editing by Hugh
Lawson)
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