Matt Hancock defends moving hospital patients to care homes in Covid crisis
Share this @internewscast.com

Discharging untested patients from hospitals to care homes during the Covid crisis was the “least worst decision”, the former health secretary Matt Hancock has told a public inquiry.

In his testimony to the UK Covid-19 inquiry on Wednesday, Hancock defended the decision – which was later ruled illegal in a high court judgment – to move hospital patients into care homes during the early weeks of the pandemic to free up space.

“Nobody has yet provided me with an alternative that was available at the time that would have saved more lives,” he said. “I still can’t see a decision that would have been less bad. None of the options were good. It was the least worst decision that could have been taken at the time. While I wish there had been a better option, I still can’t find one.

“The likelihood of things being worse if people had stayed in hospital was very high.”

Nicola Brook, a solicitor representing more than 7,000 people from Covid-19 Bereaved Families for Justice UK, said Hancock’s words were “an insult to the memory of each and every person who died”.

“He knew at the time that many care homes did not have the ability to isolate the people who would be discharged from hospital and that Covid was airborne,” she said. “It’s frankly ridiculous and insulting that he says they tried to throw a protective ring around care homes when his department’s policies caused Covid to spread like wildfire amongst society’s most vulnerable loved ones.”

Hancock said the discharge policy was “formally a government decision” but that it was “driven” by the then NHS chief executive, Simon Stevens. He also said that while he had not taken the decision himself, he took responsibility for it.

Brook said: “Mr Hancock claims the decision to discharge people into care homes was driven by Simon Stevens, the chief executive of the NHS, yet the inquiry is not calling him. We call for this decision to be urgently reviewed.”

Hancock was giving evidence as part of the sixth module of the inquiry, focusing specifically on the care sector.

Earlier this week, it was heard that a senior civil servant said there had been a “generational slaughter within care homes” in written evidence to the inquiry.

Almost 46,000 care home residents died with Covid in England and Wales between March 2020 and January 2022, many of them in the early weeks of the pandemic.

The decision to rapidly discharge hospital patients to care homes in order to free up beds, when testing and isolation facilities were not yet widely available, has been strongly criticised for causing rapid spread of the disease in care homes.

In 2022, the high court said the policy not to isolate discharged hospital patients in the first weeks of the pandemic without testing was “irrational”.

On Tuesday, a care home owner and manager giving evidence said she had refused to allow untested hospital patients into her nursing home, and was told she would be reported to the care inspectorate for bed blocking.

Hancock said that isolation of discharged patients had not been clinically recommended at the time, but “in hindsight” it should have been.

When questioned about whether there had been enough staff to care for the discharged patients, amid evidence of a widespread shortage of carers, Hancock said: “We knew that people would do what they needed to do.”

He has also been heavily criticised for his claims that a “protective ring” had been placed around care homes, previously admitting to the inquiry that it was not an “unbroken circle”.

The care sector module of the inquiry is expected to run until the end of July.

Share this @internewscast.com
You May Also Like

From Crisis to Cure: How Mounjaro Transformed My Life and Saved Me £200K

Rachel Cooper, a 35-year-old mother from South Wales, turned to weight loss…

Discover the Ultimate Fitness Secret for Seniors: Why This Activity Tops Walking and Running

Research conducted by Harvard Medical School has highlighted a novel activity for…

From Size 20 to 12 in Five Months: The Surprising Impact of ‘Healthy’ Foods on Weight Loss

A woman has shared her surprising discovery that three foods commonly perceived…

Tick-Borne Disease Outbreak Hits New England College Campus, Raising Concerns Among Celebrities

Officials at a university in Connecticut have raised concerns about the increasing…

Physician Asserts Daily Snack Consumption May Significantly Reduce Dementia Risk

Adopting a simple lunchtime habit could significantly reduce the risk of developing…

Slimming World Unveils Bold Overhaul to Stay Ahead in the Evolving Dieting Industry

Slimming World is set to rename its controversial ‘Syns’ category in an…

Phil Taylor Drops Two Foods from Diet After Discovering Mongolian Ancestry

In a surprising revelation, darts icon Phil ‘The Power’ Taylor has claimed…

Understanding Food Additives: Dietician Dr. Emily Leeming Highlights Those to Avoid for Gut Health

In recent times, food additives, particularly emulsifiers, have found themselves under scrutiny.…

California Health Alert: Three Severe Mpox Cases Detected, Officials Urge Vigilance

Health officials have reported that three individuals in California have contracted the…

Is Your Hand Sanitizer Safe? EU Scrutinizes Key Ingredient Linked to Cancer Risk

Numerous hand sanitizers across Europe may soon face removal from store shelves…

Impending Malaria Crisis: Study Predicts Unprecedented Resurgence from Funding Cuts

According to a recent analysis, major cuts in contributions from affluent nations…

Six Dietary Adjustments to Enhance Eye Health Beyond Carrots

Maintaining a balanced diet plays a crucial role in preserving optimal eye…