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Coronavirus: Government increases ventilator capacity by just 200 in one week – despite health secretary's claim 1,500 more would be available

Ministers have increased the number of life-saving ventilators available to NHS patients by just 200 in one week, despite the health secretary insisting seven days ago there would be “another 15 hundred” available.

On Monday, No 10 said “over 10,000” mechanical ventilators were now operational for seriously ill patients, as the government scrambles to meet a target of 18,000 for an anticipated peak of coronavirus cases in the coming days.

“There’s been an increase of around 200 over the past week,” the prime minister’s official spokesperson said. “There are another 2,000 mechanical ventilators on order plus thousands of provisional orders for industry designed ventilators.


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“The key point here is obviously the NHS continues to have spare capacity in terms of beds in intensive care units and ventilators, and that anybody who needs intensive care treatment or a ventilator has access to it.”

But during an appearance on the BBC’s Andrew Marr Show on 5 April, the health secretary Matt Hancock said there “should be another 15 hundred” ventilators available when pressed on how many would be operational in a week’s time.

Asked whether the UK would be below the number required of 18,000, he added: “No because, thankfully, we’ve got demand down because the vast majority of people are following these social distancing guidelines.”

“The 18,000 is our current goal because we want to be ready with belt and braces for a worst-case scenario rather than a central scenario,” he added.

In response, the Liberal Democrats urged the health secretary to “clarify the discrepancy regarding the number of ventilators quickly”.

Munira Wilson, the party’s health and social care spokesperson, said: “We cannot keep seeing ministers announce inaccurate figures in what appears to be a desperate attempt to try and seem better prepared and more on top of the coronavirus crisis than the government actually is.

“Slowing the spread of the virus depends on the public trusting the information and advice the government gives us. This sort of behaviour will not hide the government’s failure to properly prepare for the coronavirus crisis, but does put the public’s trust in the government at risk and endangers us all.

“So I ask the secretary of state: how many ventilators are in hospitals and working today, how many new ones are due to be delivered this week, and how many further are due in April?”

The latest figures from the Department of Health and Social Care revealed a further 717 people lost their lives after contracting the coronavirus, bringing the total death toll in the UK to 11,329.

Pointing to the urgency of increased ventilator capacity for NHS patients, the German army was also reported last week to have donated 60 mobile ventilators to the UK after a request from the government.


Source: UK Politics - www.independent.co.uk

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