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According to an article in The Telegraph newspaper, the UK is ‘no better prepared for the next pandemic’ than it was the first one – which was entirely predictable – because the nation has such ‘dangerous gaps’ in health security.
So says an ex government advisor. In their view, and according to other government insiders and experts, the NHS simply won’t survive another deadly new virus. At the same time another pandemic is inevitable. It isn’t a matter of if, it’s a matter of when.
The official UK Covid-19 inquiry begins shortly, with preliminary hearings looking into the nation’s pandemic preparedness and response. The country has done OK in some ways, things like developing vaccines and the excellent ONS surveillance programme. But it looks like so much key infrastructure has been either sold or taken apart that any level of government covid coordination will probably fall short.
Professor John Bell, regius professor of medicine at the University of Oxford and a member of the UK’s Covid vaccine task force during the pandemic, was one of the people who thought the pandemic gave the nation a unique opportunity to become better prepared for pandemics in future. That hasn’t happened. As he said,
“Say we got a transmissible avian flu – or worse, a virus which carried a fatality rate of about 30 or 40 per cent. Would we be ready? I think the answer is absolutely not”.
He also says the government “still hasn’t operationalised the response to pandemic threats”.
Healthcare experts are particularly disappointed in the government’s sale of the Vaccine Manufacturing and Innovation Centre this April. It used to be a £200-million government-funded centre to focus on vaccine manufacturing and research. Now it has been taken over by a private firm. Professor Rebecca Glover, assistant professor in infectious disease policy at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, isn’t the only one to label the sale short sighted. Others agree that taking vital parts of a country’s long-term preparedness infrastructures like the VMIC away makes no sense either economically or from a healthcare perspective. It just leaves the government even less able to handle new threats.
There’s more worry around the country’s ability to manufacture new drugs, especially antibody treatments. Health professionals are concerned about the facts there’s no relevant scientific or commercial expertise in government. And it is very troubling to see the NHS named as our Achilles heel.
Adam Bradshaw, a public health analyst at the Tony Blair Institute for Global Change, sees health security as a matter of national security, and says funding cuts for the UK Health Security Agency are not helping. In his words,
“Two years ago everyone was saying we’d never underinvest again… that promise has been broken.”
The first phase of the Covid inquiry will mostly be procedural, with public hearings on the cards for spring 2023. It’ll be interesting to see what falls out of the report regarding the nation’s Britain’s pandemic preparedness and response.
In business? Do your bit to help the nation fight covid this winter
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