Former health secretary Matt Hancock has denied claims the government's attempt to throw a protective ring around care homes in 2020, early in the Covid pandemic, was empty rhetoric. In an irritable exchange he urged the Covid Inquiry to focus on the substance of what the government was doing at the time. Mr Hancock said the decision to discharge patients from hospitals into care homes when testing was not available, was "the least worst solution". Nicola Brook, a lawyer representing bereaved families called his comments "an insult to the memory of each and every person who died". Mr Hancock was responsible for care services in England where more than 43,000 people died with Covid between March 2020 and January 2022, many of them in the early weeks of the pandemic. On Monday, the lawyer representing a bereaved families group quoted a civil servant who saidthe high number of deaths in care homes amounted to "generational slaughter". Responding to questions from the barrister to the inquiry Jacqueline Carey KC, Mr Hancock said: "You know there may be campaign groups and politically-motivated bodies that say other things. "What I care about though is the substance, and frankly that's what this inquiry should care about after all the millions of pounds that have been spent on it." Inquiry chair Lady Hallett, responded: "And I can assure you, Mr Hancock, it is what I care about." The current section of the Covid inquiry is likely to be "emotive and distressing", Ms Carey has warned. Questioned by Ms Carey, Mr Hancock acknowledged the discharge policy was an "incredibly contentious issue". But he added: "Nobody has yet provided me with an alternative that was available at the time that would have saved more lives." And he told the inquiry: "It's the least-worst decision that could have been taken at the time." When the pandemic hit early in 2020, hospital patients were rapidly discharged into care homes in a bid to free up beds and prevent the NHS from becoming overwhelmed. However, there was no policy in place requiring patients to be tested before admission, or for asymptomatic patients to isolate, until mid-April. This was despite growing awareness of the risks of people without Covid-19 symptoms being able to spread the virus. As his seventh and likely final appearance at the inquiry drew to a close, Mr Hancock admitted his overstretched department was "unbelievably busy, responding to the biggest civil emergency in 100 years". In sometimes tense exchanges, he fielded questions from Kate Beattie representing disabled people's organisations and Pete Weatherby, barrister for Covid-19 Bereaved Families for Justice UK. Mr Weatherby asked whether Mr Hancock had used the lack of "levers" available to him to act on Covid at the start of the pandemic as "an excuse for things when they went wrong". "This is a very easy thing to say with hindsight," Mr Hancock responded. "The reality of the situation is that I had to act with the tools that I had and that's what I did, and drove the life-saving effort to make sure things weren't even worse than they were." Elsewhere, in response to wide-ranging questioning, Mr Hancock described the concept of blanket 'do not attempt resuscitation' orders as "abhorrent". He said he only saw this happen once "and we jumped on it". If that policy was more widespread, he said: "It did not come to my attention and, if it did happen, it's totally unacceptable." Mr Hancock said the social care sector "was badly in need of and remains badly in need of reform", adding that in the event of another pandemic, he feared the situation had become "worse not better". Lawyer Nicola Brook said Mr Hancock knew at the time that many care homes did not have the ability to isolate people who would be discharged from hospital, and that Covid was airborne. "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," she said.
Covid care home policy was 'least worst decision' says Hancock
TruthLens AI Suggested Headline:
"Matt Hancock Defends Care Home Discharge Policy During Covid Inquiry"
TruthLens AI Summary
During his testimony at the Covid Inquiry, former Health Secretary Matt Hancock defended the government's controversial decision to discharge hospital patients into care homes during the early days of the pandemic. He described the policy as 'the least worst decision' that could have been made at the time, emphasizing that there was no alternative available that would have saved more lives. Hancock's remarks came in response to criticisms from bereaved families and legal representatives, who argued that the policy contributed to a significant number of deaths among vulnerable residents in care homes. More than 43,000 people died with Covid in England's care homes from March 2020 to January 2022, with many fatalities occurring in the initial weeks of the pandemic. The inquiry has highlighted the lack of testing protocols for patients discharged to care homes, which further exacerbated the spread of the virus among the elderly and vulnerable populations.
Hancock faced intense questioning from various lawyers during the inquiry, particularly regarding the government's response to the pandemic and the adequacy of measures taken to protect care home residents. He acknowledged that the discharge policy was contentious and admitted that his department was overwhelmed during the crisis. Despite the criticisms, he insisted that the government acted with the best intentions under challenging circumstances, arguing that hindsight made it easy to judge decisions made during the unprecedented health emergency. The inquiry chair, Lady Hallett, assured Hancock that the focus would remain on substantive issues rather than political rhetoric. Meanwhile, legal representatives for bereaved families challenged Hancock's narrative, claiming that the policies implemented by his department failed to adequately protect care homes, leading to what one civil servant described as 'generational slaughter.' Hancock's comments and the ongoing inquiry continue to evoke strong emotions, as families seek accountability for the tragic loss of their loved ones during the pandemic.
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