Significant numbers of home-testing kits sent out under the government’s Covid-19 programme are not being used, officials have admitted – throwing fresh doubt on the government’s figures.
The UK’s testing tsar on Friday admitted that the number of kits being sent back was not as high as health authorities would like and said steps were being taken to increase the rate.
Home test kits have comprised a large part in the government’s rapid increase in the daily number of tests carried out, as ministers faced criticism that Britain was lagging behind the rest of the world.
Download the new Independent Premium app
Sharing the full story, not just the headlines
But home tests are counted in the government’s figures as soon as they are put in the post, meaning that if they are not being returned many of those recorded will in fact never actually have taken place.
John Newton of Public Health England, who runs the testing programme, told the Commons science and technology committee that officials at Matt Hancock’s Department of Health had “advised” his operation to count tests in this way.
“The way tests were counted was discussed with officials in the Department of Health. We were advised by officials at the Department of Health on an appropriate method of counting the tests and that’s what we did,” he told MPs.
Mr Hancock’s department struggled to meet its target of testing 100,000 people before the beginning of May, and only did so if a huge number of tests mailed out in one day were counted.
On the day of the deadline alone 40,000 kits were posted out to homes and satellite centres – the latter of which are not thought to face a similar problem.
Asked what proportion of tests posted out for people to use at home were actually sent back, Professor Newton told MPs he did not have a ready figure but estimated it as “more than half”.
“To begin with, a relatively… I think something like… certainly more than half. We would like to get that amount up,” he said.
The latest news on Brexit, politics and beyond direct to your inbox
“I’m afraid I don’t have that figure, but it can be provided by the programme, I’m sure.” He promised to write to MPs after the hearing to provide the figure.
The government has also been asked about the situation with tests being sent back, and this week provided a similarly-worded and equally vague answer.
Lord Bethell, a health minister, said in a written answer to a parliamentary question that “a majority” of home test kits are returned – again meaning more than 50 per cent.
“The majority of home test kits are returned, and the ratio of kits being returned is on an upward trajectory,” he said in a written answer to another peer, declining to provide the requested figure.
The Independent has contacted both the Department of Health and Public Health England to ask for the exact figure but has not yet received a response at the time of publication.
It comes as the Daily Telegraph newspaper separately reports that tens of thousands of coronavirus tests have been counted twice, with saliva and nasal samples from the same person being recorded as two tests.
Shadow health secretary Johnathan Ashworth said of the revelation: “Ministers have already received an embarrassing slap on the wrists for their dodgy spin on testing figures. It seems they haven’t learnt their lesson. We need absolute transparency in the presentation of these figures.”