Matt Hancock warns cancer patients will only be treated if Covid-19 stays ‘under control’ – as he is savaged for ‘having no idea how many infected people are walking around’ after testing shambles saw 16.000 cases MISSED
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Cancer patients will only be treated if Covid-19 stays ‘under control’, Matt Hancock has claimed, as he faced a roasting from MPs over an Excel Spreadsheet blunder that has seen thousands wandering the streets despite being exposed to the virus.
The Health Secretary revealed in Parliament this morning that cancer referrals reached more than 90 per cent of pre-pandemic levels in July while 95 per cent of all cases received treatment within 31 days.
But he said the bounce-back could only be maintained if the virus stayed ‘under control’ with its transmission ‘suppressed’ across the UK – as cases spiral across the country with 12,594 new infections confirmed yesterday.
Labour viciously tore into the Health Secretary’s ever-growing list of blunders in the Commons, and demanded Hancock reveal whether all the contacts of those missed in the cataclysmic Excel blunder had been reached.
Firing on all cylinders after Hancock failed to give an answer, Shadow Health Secretary Jonathan Ashworth ripped into the Government’s wobbly handling of the UK’s vaccination programme.
‘I listened carefully to what he said about a vaccine yesterday in light of the News about the Government’s aims to vaccinate 30million people,’ he warned. ‘There has been an expectation that the whole of the population would get vaccinated – not least because he said at the Downing Street press conference he “would hope, given the scale of the crisis, we would have the vaccine and everyone would be given the vaccine”.
‘They’re his words. Can he tell us for the 50 per cent of people who will not be vaccinated how soon will it take for life to return to normal for them?’
The Government’s beleagured Test and Trace system is under renewed scrutiny after it emerged 16,000 positive cases had been missed due to an Excel Spreadsheet error – where cases were cut off after a certain number of rows was reached.
The disastrous oversight, which ministers are keen to blame on the soon-to-be-defunct Public Health England, meant thousands were not contacted and traced despite testing positive for the virus.