Boris Johnson will face a grilling from senior MPs amid a warning that the “failure” of the test and trace system is placing “huge pressure” on the health service.
As the system struggles to cope with soaring demand, people have been turning up to accident and emergency to ask for Covid-19 tests.
Bolton NHS Foundation Trust said yesterday that a “high volume” of patients arrived to the A&E requesting tests.
Trust chair Professor Donna Hall said people in Bolton – which has the highest infection rate in England – had been trying to get tests via their GPs and the hospital when they could not get them online or at mobile testing units.
She told BBC Radio Four’s The World Tonight: “We had 100 people in our accident and emergency unit today, five ambulances queuing outside.
“This failure of the test and trace system is placing huge pressure on the NHS and social care.”
Prof Hall said the situation now is different to March when they had extra staff drafted in and were not expected to continue with planned operations.
She said: “We’re seeing wards full of people. We’ve now got 30 people who are Covid-positive and we’ve got five people in our high dependency unit so this is not going away, this virus is not going away.”
Asked if there was more that could have been done to avoid this situation, she said: “I’ve felt that there has been a real lack of a cohesive strategy for the whole containment of Covid-19 and for test and trace.”
The criticism comes ahead of the Prime Minister’s appearance in the Commons, where he will face senior MPs who are likely to question him on the Government’s handling of the corornaviurs crisis.
Mr Johnson will face deputy Labour leader Angela Rayner for PMQs at noon because Sir Keir Starmer remains in isolation as he is “still awaiting” a coronavirus test result for a member of his family.
The PM will later face questions from select committee chairs who make up the Liaison Committee.
Health Secretary Matt Hancock has admitted that it might be “a matter of weeks” before the testing problems are resolved, and on Tuesday announced that tests in England will be rationed.
He said there would be “prioritisation” of tests for people with acute clinical need and those in social care settings as he acknowledged “operational challenges” in the system.
The updated prioritisation list which will set out who will be at the front of the queue is yet to be published.
Mr Hancock faced a barrage of complaints in the Commons about people being forced to travel long distances or even enter false addresses in the hope of securing a test.
He said there had been a “sharp rise” in people coming forward for a test, including some who are not eligible but Government sources acknowledged there was no accurate data on the latter.
Mayor of Greater Manchester Andy Burnham said the system’s struggles have come “at the worst possible time”.
He told BBC Two’s Newsnight: “I think we have got two or three weeks to fix these things. If we don’t, the worry is we’ll never regain control as we go into the rest of the autumn and winter.”
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