South Wales Echo

‘Inadequate’ response to care home threat

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ELDERLY residents living in care homes in Wales during the early days of the Covid-19 pandemic were put at risk by the Welsh Government’s “inadequate” response to the threat posed by the virus, the inquiry has been told.

Helena Herklots, Older People’s Commission­er for Wales, told the UK Covid-19 inquiry that the provision of testing and personal protective equipment (PPE) equipment to care homes was insufficie­nt to protect elderly residents.

The hearing in Cardiff heard Ms Herklots had written to the Welsh Government’s deputy health and social services minister in April 2020 calling for a care home action plan and the response was “inadequate”.

She had first raised her concerns about the virus in care homes with deputy minister Julie Morgan in a meeting on April 9 and then in a follow-up letter on April 14. In the letter, she asked the Welsh Government to take “urgent action” in several areas, including the “consistent” and “effective” delivery of PPE to care homes, and the “adequate supplies of infection control measures”.

“What I was hearing regarding PPE was that the supply was inconsiste­nt,” she told the inquiry.

“It was causing quite a lot of homes a lot of anxiety and stress about not having the PPE they needed.”

The letter called for a “plan of action” from the Welsh Government to limit the spread of Covid-19 in care homes.

The inquiry heard Ms Morgan replied on April 21 saying she was “not convinced an additional plan of action over and above those arrangemen­ts... will add value here”.

Asked for her opinion on the “adequacy” of that response, she replied: “I thought it was inadequate and I was angered, actually, by the notion that working on an action plan and producing an action plan, bringing the work together, would add no value at a time when people were dying in care homes and families were distraught. I just thought the response was inadequate.”

The inquiry heard Ms Herklots also asked the Welsh Government to ensure testing of care home residents showing signs of coronaviru­s was carried out.

“This was such a major issue that older people were being discharged into care homes from hospital without testing, and people within care homes were not being tested,” she said.

“The feedback I was hearing and seeing, sadly, in relation to the number of people losing their lives in care homes was that testing was an essential part of protecting people. At that time, there wasn’t the testing that was being made available and I felt it was urgent for improvemen­ts to be made in that in particular.”

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