London: Prime Minister Boris Johnson said Britain would “massively increase testing” amid a growing wave of criticism on Thursday about his government’s failure to provide widespread coronavirus screening.
In a video message posted online on Wednesday night from Downing Street, where he has been in self-isolation since announcing on March 27 that he had contracted the virus, Johnson said testing was the “way through”.
“We’re also massively increasing testing. As I have said for weeks and weeks this (testing) is the way through,” Johnson said.
“This is how we will unlock the coronavirus puzzle, this is how we will defeat it in the end.”
He was reacting to condemnation of his government, especially in the media, after officials revealed that just 2,000 out of half-a-million staff in the state-run National Health Service (NHS) had been tested.
There have also been reports of staff being turned away from drive-in test centres because they did not have the correct paperwork, or others which were deserted because testing was by appointment only.
Figures published Wednesday showed a total of 2,352 people with COVID-19 have died in the UK, an increase of 563, the largest single-day rise. Two of the deaths were medics.
Testing below daily target
Testing for the general public has also been condemned as not being widespread enough.
On Tuesday, 10,000 hospital patients and NHS staff were tested in England, well below the daily target of 25,000 and the 70,000 a day achieved in Germany.
This is how we will unlock the coronavirus puzzle, this is how we will defeat it in the end.
Various normally pro-government newspapers condemned the plans as “chaotic”, a “scandal” and a “shambles” as the backlash gathered pace.
Paul Nurse, chief executive of biomedical research centre the Francis Crick Institute, told the BBC Thursday that the government should summon “the Dunkirk spirit” and let ‘small ship’ labs start screening for the killer disease.
So far, Public Health England (PHE), the body tasked with testing, has insisted all screening should be carried out centrally.
PHE medical director Professor Paul Cosford defended his organisation’s work.
“At the very outset we identified this, we got the tests in place, we designed the tests in our laboratories. We have played our part,” he told BBC radio.
Britain is currently in lockdown, with shops shut and the public asked to stay at home to try to limit the spread of coronavirus.
The government has promised an enormous package of support for businesses and employees hit by the measures, but is facing questions about how quickly the money is getting through.
New government figures show 950,000 people applied for state welfare support known as universal credit in the last fortnight.
It is available to the unemployed and those on low incomes.
National plane carrier British Airways is expected to announce it will suspend 36,000 staff later on Thursday.