E3: UK coronavirus live: NHS frontline staff may walk out over lack of PPE, says union
Surveys reveal medics’ concerns about pressures to work without protection. Follow this and all the day’s developments in the UK’s Covid-19 crisis
- Frontline staff may refuse to work over lack of PPE, says union
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Unapproved antibody tests could increase people’s risk of becoming infected with coronavirus, the UK’s national testing coordinator has warned.
Countries around the globe are scrambling to develop reliable antibody tests that can detect if people have had the virus and may be immune, in the hope that this might allow for a loosening of lockdown restrictions – so far without success.
Related: Unverified antibody tests 'risk increasing coronavirus infections'
Tributes have been paid to a staff member at Greater Manchester police who died after contracting Covid-19.
Marcia Pryce, 61, died on 2 April. She had worked for the force for more than 30 years, most recently in its intelligence bureau.
Marcia was a powerhouse, a positive influence in my life and the lives of the many people she knew and loved.
She didn’t have children of her own, but she had more godchildren than we can count and they meant so much to her. Many are now adults but still refer to her lovingly as ‘Aunty Marce’.
Hundreds of Britons stuck in Bangladesh will be repatriated after the government chartered four flights as part of a new push to to bring more than 7,000 UK citizens home from South Asia.
Those deemed most at risk from coronavirus, such as the sick and elderly, will be given priority, the Foreign and Commonwealth Office (FCO) said.
Booking is open for the first @UKinBangladesh flights from Dhaka, starting on Tuesday 21 April, to bring Brits back to the UK from Bangladesh . All four flights next week have accompanying transfers from Sylhet. For booking details see: https://t.co/rQ0ZAVVLsu.
This is from ITV’s Robert Peston.
This is the best measure I’ve seen of quite how few #COVID19 tests the UK has done. It is an international league table of countries ranked by percentage of population tested, compiled by Julian Ozanne (who was on FT with me in another life). The UK comes 20th out of 20 pic.twitter.com/pvJaMe3GH6
Thank you so much to everybody who has been in touch throughout the morning with tips and suggestions. I love reading through them all, especially the ones thanking the Guardian for its coverage of this crisis. Please do continue to get in touch as the day goes on via the usual channels (below) and apologies if I cannot respond to you all individually.
Email: lucy.campbell@theguardian.com
Twitter: @lucy_campbell_
This, from the FT’s Peter Foster, is one of the best things you will read today. In essence:
The government needs to show some HUMILITY. It needs to LISTEN TO PEOPLE WHO KNOW STUFF. I think this is a clear example of where it did not.
NEW: The inside story of the Ventilator Challenge - the muddled thinking, the wasted time the political egoism. It's a mad tale. Stay with me. Me with my superb @ft colleague @Michael_Pooler 1/Threadhttps://t.co/5SNI7QbzAU
DC John Coker has died in hospital after coming down with symptoms of coronavirus on 22 March, British Transport Police said.
In a statement, BTP Chief Constable Paul Crowther said his thoughts were with Coker’s family after the 53-year-old passed away last night following an “incredibly difficult” three weeks. He said:
John was taken ill on 22 March with symptoms of coronavirus. After his health did not improve he was admitted to hospital and transferred to an intensive care unit to receive critical treatment. Despite the best efforts of hospital staff, John’s health did not improve, and he passed away on 17 April.
John has been part of the BTP family for over a decade and became a detective constable within the CID department at Euston where he was much loved and respected by all those he worked with. His colleagues remember a man who was charismatic, kind and thoughtful and took everything in his stride. He will be greatly missed by all in the force.
It's with great sadness that we're reporting the death of an officer due to Covid-19.
DC John Coker, 53, passed away last night. Our thoughts are with his loved ones during this incredibly difficult time.
John will be greatly missed across the Force https://t.co/FU7pa534IG pic.twitter.com/nECnfVjaWg
NHS frontline staff may refuse to work if there is not enough personal protective equipment (PPE) to ensure their safety, the UK’s biggest union has warned.
The warning came in response to new guidance from Public Health England, revealed by the Guardian on Friday, which instructs healthcare workers to reuse disposable PPE. The guidelines also recommended that medics wear aprons if they are unable to access full-length gowns, and there are concerns that some PPE supplies are close to running out.
If gowns run out, staff in high-risk areas may well decide that it’s no longer safe for them to work.
No part of the NHS should use this move as an excuse to ration supplies of gowns when they still have stocks. That would cause a damaging breakdown of trust at a time when staff are working under intense pressure.
Related: NHS frontline staff may refuse to work over lack of PPE, says union
The Queen’s birthday on Tuesday will not be marked by gun salutes for what is believed will be the first time, due to the coronavirus crisis, PA Media news agency reports.
A Buckingham Palace source said the Queen’s 94th birthday will not be marked in any special way, adding that any calls with family will be kept private. The source said:
There will be no gun salutes - Her Majesty was keen that no special measures were put in place to allow gun salutes as she did not feel it appropriate in the current circumstances.
This is from the foreign secretary (or rather, his son).
Lockdown art from my 7 year old ... pic.twitter.com/TgcypTksmV
The government’s programme to release up to 4,000 low-risk prisoners early to help jails cope with coronavirus has been paused after six inmates were freed by mistake.
The inmates were candidates for early release but were let out too soon because of an “administrative error”, the Ministry of Justice said. After the flaw was spotted, they all “returned compliantly to prison”, a spokeswoman added.
Related: UK coronavirus prison plan suspended after six mistakenly released
These errors must not be used as an excuse for inaction in the face on an oncoming public health disaster. Prisons are overcrowded, with thousands of cells containing more than one inmate, against the advice of Public Health England.
If the Ministry of Justice does not take sufficient steps to move towards single cell occupancy, it is not only inmates and prison officers who will be put at risk. NHS Hospitals risk becoming overwhelmed and the virus will spread rapidly from prisons across the wider public.
The culture secretary Oliver Dowden has asked the public to “add one small thing” to their to-do list and buy a newspaper as the press grapples “with the biggest existential crisis in its history”.
The newspaper business has come under increasing strain amid the coronavirus pandemic, with falling advertising revenue and declining circulation.
Human trials of a potential vaccine have begun at Oxford University and trials could be completed by mid-August, Prof John Bell told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme this morning.
Bell, who is a member of the government’s vaccine taskforce, said the possibility of a vaccine being produced by the autumn depended on efficacy. He said:
[The question is] will it protect people, and that has not been tested, and it will only be tested once you have vaccinated a significant number of people and exposed them to the virus and counted how many people have got the virus in that population.
So, we won’t even get a signal for that until May. But if things go on course and it does have efficacy, then I think it is reasonable to think that they would be able to complete their trial by mid-August.
One of the reasons that we were rushing is to try and catch this wave of the disease.
Because when the disease goes away there will be very, very few cases until we get a second wave.
Good morning everybody. Thousands of doctors and nurses are concerned about inadequate supplies of personal protection equipment (PPE) amid fears some hospitals could run out entirely this weekend.
A British Medical Association survey of more than 6,000 doctors across the country said a significant amount of them remain without the protection they need to guard against Covid-19. Meanwhile another survey by the Royal College of Nursing found half of nurses have felt pressure to work without appropriate protective equipment during the crisis.
Guardian front page, Saturday 18 April 2020: NHS staff told ‘wear aprons’ as protective gowns run out pic.twitter.com/ZHP8jnDt9a
Related: NHS staff told 'wear aprons' as protective gowns run out
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