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Johnson condemned over 'cowardly' care home claims No apology over Boris Johnson's 'cowardly' care home claims
(about 4 hours later)
Charity chief says blaming ‘brave people on minimum wage’ over Covid-19 is appalling Both No 10 spokesperson and health secretary say PM’s remarks were ‘misunderstood’
The head of a leading social care charity has called Boris Johnson “clumsy and cowardly” for arguing that many care homes did not follow proper procedures on coronavirus, saying the prime minister was seeking to rewrite history. The government has repeatedly refused to apologise after Boris Johnson said many care homes did not follow proper procedures on coronavirus, comments the head of a leading social care charity condemned as “clumsy and cowardly”.
The prime minister’s remarks, on a visit to Yorkshire on Monday, prompted outrage and anger from the care sector, unions and opposition MPs.
Johnson said the Covid-19 outbreak had illustrated problems with care homes, where nearly 20,000 people are confirmed to have died from the virus, adding: “We discovered too many care homes didn’t really follow the procedures in the way that they could have but we’re learning lessons the whole time.”
Mark Adams, the chief executive of Community Integrated Care, which provides care to a range of people in England and Scotland, said care homes were still having to provide much of their personal protective equipment (PPE), and were only now getting sufficient access to testing.Mark Adams, the chief executive of Community Integrated Care, which provides care to a range of people in England and Scotland, said care homes were still having to provide much of their personal protective equipment (PPE), and were only now getting sufficient access to testing.
Johnson prompted anger from the care sector, unions and MPs on Monday when, on a visit to Yorkshire, he said the Covid-19 outbreak had illustrated problems with care homes, where nearly 20,000 people are confirmed to have died from the virus.
He said: “We discovered too many care homes didn’t really follow the procedures in the way that they could have but we’re learning lessons the whole time.”
A No 10 spokesman said later that Johnson was not blaming care homes, but “pointing out that nobody knew what the correct procedures were because the extent of asymptomatic transmission was not known at the time”.
Asked for his reaction to Johnson’s comments, Adams told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme: “I probably can’t say on national radio, but let’s just say, unbelievably disappointed.”Asked for his reaction to Johnson’s comments, Adams told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme: “I probably can’t say on national radio, but let’s just say, unbelievably disappointed.”
He went on: “I think this, at best, was clumsy and cowardly, but to be honest with you, if this is genuinely his view, I think we’re almost entering a Kafka-esque alternative reality where the government set the rules, we follow them, they don’t like the results and they then deny setting the rules and blame the people that were trying to do their best. It is hugely frustrating.”He went on: “I think this, at best, was clumsy and cowardly, but to be honest with you, if this is genuinely his view, I think we’re almost entering a Kafka-esque alternative reality where the government set the rules, we follow them, they don’t like the results and they then deny setting the rules and blame the people that were trying to do their best. It is hugely frustrating.”
Asked why he believed the prime minister’s comments were cowardly, Adams said: “Because you’ve got 1.6 million social care workers who, when most of us are locked away in our bunkers, waiting out Covid, and really trying to protect our family, we’ve got these brave people on minimum wage, often with no sickness cover at all, going into work to protect our parents, our grandparents, our children, putting their own health and potentially lives at risk. Asked whether Johnson regretted his choice of words given the upset, the prime minister’s spokesman repeatedly avoided the question, instead reiterating No 10’s argument that the comments had been misunderstood.
“Throughout the pandemic, care homes have done a brilliant job under very difficult circumstances,” the spokesman said. “What the prime minister was pointing out was that nobody knew what the correct procedures to put in place were at the time, because the extent of asymptomatic transmission was not known. We are learning about this virus all the time.”
Answering an urgent question on coronavirus in the Commons, the health secretary, Matt Hancock, was asked by his Labour shadow minister, Jonathan Ashworth, whether he could “understand why people are so insulated by the prime minister’s remarks”, and if he would apologise.
Instead of answering the question, Hancock repeated the government line that Johnson had been misunderstood.
Asked on Today why he believed the prime minister’s comments were cowardly, Adams said: “Because you’ve got 1.6 million social care workers who, when most of us are locked away in our bunkers, waiting out Covid, and really trying to protect our family, we’ve got these brave people on minimum wage, often with no sickness cover at all, going into work to protect our parents, our grandparents, our children, putting their own health and potentially lives at risk.
“And then to get perhaps the most senior man in the country turning round and blaming on them what has been an absolute travesty of leadership from the government, I just think it’s appalling.”“And then to get perhaps the most senior man in the country turning round and blaming on them what has been an absolute travesty of leadership from the government, I just think it’s appalling.”
Adams said care homes had been let down on protective equipment, and “abandoned” when it came to testing.Adams said care homes had been let down on protective equipment, and “abandoned” when it came to testing.
“We’ve got a situation where the whole of the social care system has had to source 90% of its PPE since the beginning of the crisis, and that’s still the same,” he said.“We’ve got a situation where the whole of the social care system has had to source 90% of its PPE since the beginning of the crisis, and that’s still the same,” he said.
“We didn’t test social care until the end of May. So us, like most social care operators, had our losses before we’d even started having any testing at all.“We didn’t test social care until the end of May. So us, like most social care operators, had our losses before we’d even started having any testing at all.
“Yes, the testing has now reached a point where most of our staff in care homes and most of the residents in care homes have been tested once, but once is absolutely useless because if you get tested and then get on the bus back home, and you pick up the virus on the bus, within a week you’re potentially asymptomatic and infectious.“Yes, the testing has now reached a point where most of our staff in care homes and most of the residents in care homes have been tested once, but once is absolutely useless because if you get tested and then get on the bus back home, and you pick up the virus on the bus, within a week you’re potentially asymptomatic and infectious.
“We have been crying out for weekly or ideally twice-weekly testing, for months and we’ve only just got that commitment. It is a question of the horse bolting and shutting the stable door.”“We have been crying out for weekly or ideally twice-weekly testing, for months and we’ve only just got that commitment. It is a question of the horse bolting and shutting the stable door.”
However the business secretary, Alok Sharma, said Johnson was “certainly not blaming care homes” for social care coronavirus deaths in his comments. Speaking later on the same programme, the business secretary, Alok Sharma, said Johnson was “certainly not blaming care homes” for coronavirus deaths, saying the comments had been misinterpreted.
Sharma told Today: “Specifically on the point the prime minister was making yesterday, I think what he was actually pointing out is that nobody knew what the correct procedures were at the time because, quite frankly, we didn’t know what the extent of asymptomatic transmission was. That wasn’t known at the time.
“We then put in place very detailed action plans for care homes, we made sure there was a rigorous testing regime put in place, and we also ensured there was extra money - there was £600m that went in as part of an infection control fund. So we have supported the sector throughout.”