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Matt Hancock accused of insulting 'memory of every COVID victim' over inquiry comments

Matt Hancock accused of insulting 'memory of every COVID victim' over inquiry comments

Sky News2 days ago
Former health secretary Matt Hancock has been accused of insulting the "memory of each and every person who died" over his description of the way patients were discharged into care homes during the COVID pandemic.
Speaking at the inquiry into the government's handling of the crisis, Mr Hancock said discharging patients from hospitals to care homes in the early stages of the pandemic was "the least-worst decision" at the time.
"It was formally a government decision," he added. "It was signed off by the prime minister. It was really driven by Simon Stevens, the chief executive of the NHS, but it was widely discussed.
"Nobody has yet provided me with an alternative that was available at the time that would have saved more lives."
When the pandemic hit in early 2020, hospital patients were rapidly discharged into care homes in a bid to free up beds and prevent the NHS from becoming overwhelmed.
But there was no policy in place requiring patients to be tested for COVID before admission, or for asymptomatic patients to isolate, until mid-April - despite growing awareness of the risks of people without symptoms spreading the virus.
The High Court ruled in 2022 that government policies on discharging hospital patients into care homes at the start of the pandemic were "unlawful".
Nicola Brook, a solicitor for more than 7,000 families from COVID-19 Bereaved Families for Justice UK, said Mr Hancock's claim that the policy had been the least-worst decision available was "an insult to the memory of each and every person who died".
She added: "He knew at the time that many care homes did not have the ability to isolate the people who would be discharged from hospital and that COVID was airborne."
No apology or empathy from Hancock
Matt Hancock has given evidence to the COVID inquiry many times before. He has been accused of being combative, bullish and insensitive.
Wednesday's appearance will do nothing to diminish that criticism.
This module deals specifically with care homes.
The government's decision to allow mostly untested patients into care homes with their population of elderly, vulnerable residents is widely seen as its most controversial move during the health emergency.
It resulted in the deaths of thousands of care home residents.
At the time, addressing the country during a Downing Street press conference, Mr Hancock said a protective ring had been thrown around care homes.
When challenged on that statement today, the former health secretary said it was "rhetoric".
He had tried, he said. But it was impossible.
Mr Hancock told the inquiry it was not his decision but a collective one that he was charged with enforcing.
He stressed several times it was the "least worst option" because if he had not acted to create capacity in hospitals by transferring patients, the NHS would have been overwhelmed.
When challenged with evidence presented to the inquiry that Mr Hancock "lied about the situation" and he had left older people to be "culled" because they could no longer contribute to society, Mr Hancock simply countered by saying he had had people in touch at the time thanking him for his efforts.
And this was said to an inquiry room where people who had lost loved ones in care homes sat barely a few feet away.
No contrition. No apology. No empathy.
'We were in bleak circumstances'
Mr Hancock, who offered no apology at the inquiry, became health secretary in 2018.
He resigned from the Conservative government in 2021 after admitting to breaking social distancing guidance by having an affair with a colleague.
He added: "We were trying to do everything that we possibly could, we were in bleak circumstances."
4:59
The inquiry has previously heard there were more than 43,000 deaths involving the virus in care homes across the UK between March 2020 and July 2022.
A civil servant was quoted earlier this week describing the figure as a "generational slaughter within care homes".
'Would my dad still be alive?'
Sharon Cook, whose parents were living in a care home when the pandemic struck, said there was a "lot of confusion" about the guidance at the time.
She told Sky News her mother tested positive for COVID and died three days later.
She was allowed into the care home to tell her father, who had dementia, but after one visit, she was prevented from returning.
A week later, her father died and when she went to the care home, she was told they had not attempted to resuscitate him.
When she asked why, they showed her a DNAR (Do Not Attempt Resuscitation) form, which, they said, "had been in consultation with me".
"If they'd been using the proper form, a more up-to-date form, I would have had to countersign," she said.
"So I would have seen that, and then I could have exercised his right to have a second opinion.
"So I'll never know if he would have survived, or not, but there was certainly a lot of confusion around care homes at the time that the guidance was being given.
"And when I went back three months later to discuss what had happened, they actually said, 'oh, our mistake, we should have actually let you in.
"If I'd been let in, would my dad still be with me? I don't know."
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