Hancock’s admission and officials opposed quarantine, 5 things learned from the Covid inquiry

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Hancock’s admission and officials opposed quarantine, 5 things learned from the Covid inquiry
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Today the Covid Inquiry heard from Matt Hancock 🔎 Here are five things we learned, explained by janemerrick23

first emerged, the Department of Health and Social Care did not know how many care homes were operating in England. The former minister said responsibility for pandemic planning in care homes “formally fell to local authorities” through each local resilience forum, but when the virus struck and he asked to see those plans, only two were in place and they were “wholly inadequate”.

Mr Hancock admitted his department did not have in place a “single coherent plan” to identify vulnerable users of social care, that a central plan to share data between public and private care providers and emergency services was not yet in place, and there was no single national guidance for pandemic preparedness in the sector. Former head of Public Health England, Duncan Selbie, later admitted to the inquiry: “Social care was just not on our radar… there’s no getting away from that.

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