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Covid: UK start to pandemic worst public health failure ever, MPs say

(205 Posts)
MaizieD Tue 12-Oct-21 07:10:34

Just in case people are puzzled as to why Boris the Beloved is constantly being criticised.

The Select Committee report on the the government's handling of the covid pandemic out today (well, yesterday really)

I expect that's why he's gone on holiday. Hoping the flack will have died down before he gets back.

www.bbc.co.uk/news/health-58876089

Parsley3 Tue 12-Oct-21 10:16:01

Criticise government decisions.....hope other countries will do the same.

I am only interested in the UK. Other countries did not delay lockdowns and border control. It is just as well the UK government did not delay the vaccine rollout as well. So praise for that.
However, the decision to leave it up to the individual in parts of the UK re Hands, Face, Space worries me. My granddaughter’s school is on the brink of going back to blended learning.

VioletSky Tue 12-Oct-21 10:14:44

When all this started I was due to fly to visit my dad. He told me not to come, he said it will all lockdown soon, the governments here and there are going to realise their mistake.

He was right. He had seen this coming before they did because he was listening to the sources they weren't.

They made a huge mistake and it cost lives. They locked down too late.

They didn't listen to the warnings. They didn't have anything in place to prepare for a pandemic that history taught us would happen so much more easily than in the past in such a mobile world.

They didn't listen when they were told that allowing covid too much of a strong standing in the community would allow for more dangerous variants.

They didn't do enough to stop new variants coming in to the country or even just the spread between communities.

Now they have thrown children and schools under a bus because they are relying on herd immunity for young people.

No planning, no foresight, no empathy and no following their own rules.

Whitewavemark2 Tue 12-Oct-21 10:13:13

“Why are the words 'corporate manslaughter' not yet a major part of the public debate on Covid?”

PollyTickle Tue 12-Oct-21 10:08:01

With you too Lucca on the mask wearing issue, no brainer

Lucca Tue 12-Oct-21 10:07:44

A couple of paragraphs which are telling. IMO
“The result was that too little was done in the early weeks to stop Covid spreading, despite evidence from China and then Italy that it was a virus that was highly infectious, caused severe illness and for which there was no cure”

Plus “ …decisions on lockdowns and social distancing during the early weeks of the pandemic - and the advice that led to them - .ranked as “one of the most important public health failures the UK has ever experienced”

MaizieD Tue 12-Oct-21 10:07:39

But we've all always known this haven't we? It's surely not news as there have been comments on GN and in other places saying that we should have locked down earlier etc.

There is a world of difference between concerned citizens discussing the management of the pandemic and a report of a Parliamentary Select Committee (in this case, two of them). One of the purposes of a Select committee is to examine government action and to hold it to account. This isn't just some grumbling citizens, it's part of the democratic 'machine'.

It focuses on the existence of the flu pandemic planning and says that it was mistaken to rely on it; presumably the SCs weren't aware of the later Exercise Alice (which has only just come to public knowledge) which was modelled on an outbreak of SARS or MERS, far more similar diseases to covd19. No doubt because the government at that time filed it away and 'forgot' about it, as they did with Cygnus. I haven't yet got far enough into the report to see if they were critical of the government for not acting on the recommendations of the report in to the Cygnus exercise (flu), which found failures in the pandemic planning.

PollyTickle Tue 12-Oct-21 10:06:57

With you all the way there Lemongrove.

lemongrove Tue 12-Oct-21 10:01:12

Some things that happened were wrong, some were absolutely right, an inquiry highlights these things so that things can be done better if it happens again ( which at some point it will) it’s also called being wise after the event.
No government of any political stripe would have got it all right, and at least we are the sort of country that can and does
Criticise government decisions.....hope other countries will do the same.

Lucca Tue 12-Oct-21 09:56:28

TwoWolves

I haven't read the whole report, just what's been reported on the report, but I haven't seen one mention of facemasks. They didn't even warrant a mention - just points to the fact that they were never of any use.

You have evidence of this ?
I never will understand why people are so pathetic about wearing a mask.

Lucca Tue 12-Oct-21 09:55:17

And….those who began the “carping and criticism” would have liked to be in charge quite possibly !!

Casdon Tue 12-Oct-21 09:54:47

I think you hit the nail on the head there growstuff. I was still working in the NHS then, and there was a huge amount of lobbying from the professionals in the service to shut down earlier than we did because it was quite clear what was coming from very early on in the pandemic. Public Health were giving the messages to the government, but they were burying their heads in the sand. It was very frightening.

Lucca Tue 12-Oct-21 09:54:16

Rosina

I am puzzled as to why people think a government deliberately sets out to kill people, do the wrong thing, and make themselves hugely unpopular. So many are so clever with hindsight. Evidence can usually only be found after the event.
If only those who began the carping and criticism had been in charge - deaths would have been in single figures and we could have shown the world how to do it. As it is there have been so many tragedies in countries all over the world; I expect that is the fault of the British government too.

This thing about “hindsight” again.
What about the schools going back for a day after Christmas ??
What about schools not being allowed to close early before Christmas ?

Hindsight ? No, just appalling judgement

TwoWolves Tue 12-Oct-21 09:52:23

I haven't read the whole report, just what's been reported on the report, but I haven't seen one mention of facemasks. They didn't even warrant a mention - just points to the fact that they were never of any use.

Whitewavemark2 Tue 12-Oct-21 09:50:25

I was clear that the information was out there, as DH and I “locked down” about two weeks before the government.

growstuff Tue 12-Oct-21 09:48:19

Rosina

I am puzzled as to why people think a government deliberately sets out to kill people, do the wrong thing, and make themselves hugely unpopular. So many are so clever with hindsight. Evidence can usually only be found after the event.
If only those who began the carping and criticism had been in charge - deaths would have been in single figures and we could have shown the world how to do it. As it is there have been so many tragedies in countries all over the world; I expect that is the fault of the British government too.

Many people who understood what was going on at the time were "clever" at the time. They didn't need hindsight.

Whitewavemark2 Tue 12-Oct-21 09:44:46

Rosina

I am puzzled as to why people think a government deliberately sets out to kill people, do the wrong thing, and make themselves hugely unpopular. So many are so clever with hindsight. Evidence can usually only be found after the event.
If only those who began the carping and criticism had been in charge - deaths would have been in single figures and we could have shown the world how to do it. As it is there have been so many tragedies in countries all over the world; I expect that is the fault of the British government too.

No one believes that Johnson set out to kill people, but what he did do was to show a level of incompetence that is utterly unacceptable in a leader of any country, which resulted in far more deaths that was necessary.

The figures don’t lie.

Barmeyoldbat Tue 12-Oct-21 09:44:28

The government didn't heed advice and they are still doing it, we should still all be wearing masks despite the number vaccinated.

Rosina Tue 12-Oct-21 09:38:21

I am puzzled as to why people think a government deliberately sets out to kill people, do the wrong thing, and make themselves hugely unpopular. So many are so clever with hindsight. Evidence can usually only be found after the event.
If only those who began the carping and criticism had been in charge - deaths would have been in single figures and we could have shown the world how to do it. As it is there have been so many tragedies in countries all over the world; I expect that is the fault of the British government too.

Whitewavemark2 Tue 12-Oct-21 09:13:30

Septimia

But we've all always known this haven't we? It's surely not news as there have been comments on GN and in other places saying that we should have locked down earlier etc.

Unfortunately you can only make the decision that seems to be the best one at the time. In this case, hindsight shows that the decisions were wrong (as we GNers know). For many things that's just part of the learning curve. The misjudgements over Covid were devastating.

We’ve always “known” this but without actual hard evidence to back it up. Now the evidence is beginning to stack up and it isn’t pretty.

Septimia Tue 12-Oct-21 08:54:44

But we've all always known this haven't we? It's surely not news as there have been comments on GN and in other places saying that we should have locked down earlier etc.

Unfortunately you can only make the decision that seems to be the best one at the time. In this case, hindsight shows that the decisions were wrong (as we GNers know). For many things that's just part of the learning curve. The misjudgements over Covid were devastating.

Galaxy Tue 12-Oct-21 08:04:39

And delayed each lockdown , and what happened in care homes, it goes on and on.

Kandinsky Tue 12-Oct-21 07:54:34

Agree Kim19. Didn’t most other countries?

Kim19 Tue 12-Oct-21 07:39:19

The only major mistake that lingers with me is that we didn't completely close our borders and quickly. No brainer.

Whitewavemark2 Tue 12-Oct-21 07:36:21

nanna8

I wouldn’t want to have what we have here in Melbourne. It is depressing and awful and although we have dodged a billet to a certain extent we have paid a heavy price in mental health and economic issues. The worlds longest lockdown apparently nearly 300 days.

How many deaths per million compared to U.K.?

nanna8 Tue 12-Oct-21 07:35:31

I wouldn’t want to have what we have here in Melbourne. It is depressing and awful and although we have dodged a billet to a certain extent we have paid a heavy price in mental health and economic issues. The worlds longest lockdown apparently nearly 300 days.