
Hancock: Moving patients from hospitals to care homes was least-worst decision
Bereaved people whose loved ones died in care homes have urged truth and accountability from those appearing before the UK Covid-19 inquiry, as its focus for the next month falls on the care sector.
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, and a civil servant was quoted earlier this week describing the toll as a 'generational slaughter within care homes'.
Appearing before the inquiry on Wednesday, Mr Hancock acknowledged the discharge policy was an 'incredibly contentious issue' but added that '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.
However, there was no policy in place requiring patients to be tested before admission, or for asymptomatic patients to isolate, until mid-April.
This was despite growing awareness of the risks of people without Covid-19 symptoms being able to spread the virus.
Mr Hancock, who resigned from government in 2021 after admitting breaking social distancing guidance by having an affair with a colleague, has given evidence to the inquiry multiple times.
Returning for a full-day session to face questions specifically about the care sector, he said the hospital discharge policy had been a government decision but had been 'driven' by then-NHS chief executive Sir Simon Stevens, now Lord Stevens.
Mr Hancock said: 'It was formally a government decision. 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.'
The inquiry heard Mr Hancock said in his witness statement that NHS England had 'insisted' on the policy, and that while he did not take the decision himself, he took responsibility for it as then-health secretary.
He said it was an 'incredibly contentious issue' but added that 'nobody has yet provided me with an alternative that was available at the time that would have saved more lives'.
He said there were no good options, adding: 'It's the least-worst decision that could have been taken at the time.'
Pressed further, he said he had both agreed with and defended the decision at the time.
The High Court ruled in 2022 that Government policies on discharging hospital patients into care homes at the start of the pandemic were 'unlawful'.
While the judges said it was necessary to discharge patients 'to preserve the capacity of the NHS', they found it was 'irrational' for the Government not to have advised that asymptomatic patients should isolate from existing residents for 14 days after admission.
In 2023, appearing for a separate module of the inquiry, Mr Hancock admitted the so-called protective ring he said had been put around care homes early in the pandemic was not an unbroken one, and said he understood the strength of feeling people have on the issue.
At a Downing Street press conference on May 15 2020, Mr Hancock said: 'Right from the start, we've tried to throw a protective ring around our care homes.'
Bereaved families have previously called this phrase a 'sickening lie' and a 'joke'.
Nicola Brook, a solicitor representing more than 7,000 families from Covid-19 Bereaved Families for Justice UK (CBFFJ), said Mr Hancock's claim that the discharge 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.
'It's frankly ridiculous and insulting that he says they tried to throw a protective ring around care homes when his department's policies caused Covid to spread like wildfire amongst society's most vulnerable loved ones.
'Mr Hancock claims the decision to discharge people into care homes was driven by Simon Stevens, the chief executive of the NHS, yet the inquiry is not calling him. We would call for this decision to be urgently reviewed.'
The CBFFJ group had already written to inquiry chairwoman Baroness Heather Hallett, to express their concern at some 'key decision-makers' not expected to be called in this module, including former prime minister Boris Johnson.
Outlining the state of the adult social care sector at the outbreak of the pandemic, Mr Hancock said it 'was badly in need of, and remains badly in need of, reform', but rejected the suggestion of it being a 'Cinderella service to the NHS'.
He said pandemic contingency plans, prepared by local authorities for adult social care, had been 'as good as useless' at the time, and described a 'hodge podge of accountability' between local councils and Government departments.
He claimed the situation has 'got worse not better' for care homes in the event of another pandemic hitting, and suggested a series of recommendations, including having isolation facilities in care homes and ensuring a stockpile of personal protective equipment (PPE).
Module six of the inquiry is focused on the effect the pandemic had on both the publicly and privately funded adult social care sector across the UK.
Public hearings for the care sector module are expected to run until the end of July.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


BBC News
an hour ago
- BBC News
Cumbria's £19m new diagnostic centre set for opening
A £19m diagnostic health centre is set to open to patients later this month, health bosses have confirmed. North Cumbria Integrated Care NHS Foundation Trust (NCIC) said it had taken ownership of the Community Diagnostic Centre (CDC) in work has been ongoing at the town centre site for over a year, with the centre set to provide MRI, CT, X-ray, ultrasound and lung function tests to the local community. Dr Adrian Clements, executive medical director, said the centre would "make a huge difference" to those living across Cumbria. "Having a centre like this embedded in the local community is key to the future of the NHS," he forms part of a national programme to improve local access to diagnostic testing. The £19m funding was secured from the national CDC programme, which aims to reduce health inequalities in the region by providing people with access to care closer to home. The trust said it had been handed the keys to the building by construction firm Graham and it had come in on time and on are due to begin training before it is set for a phased opening to patients later this month. Follow BBC Cumbria on X, Facebook, Nextdoor and Instagram.


South Wales Guardian
an hour ago
- South Wales Guardian
Healthy life expectancy at record low for women in most deprived areas
The inequality gap between men and women has also grown, with those living in better-off parts of England enjoying around two more decades of healthy life. The Covid-19 pandemic, with its increased levels of mortality, is continuing to have an impact on life expectancy estimates, according to the Office for National Statistics (ONS) which published the figures. Females born between 2020 and 2022 in the most deprived areas of England were likely to spend just 65.1% of their lives in good health, compared with 81.5% in the least deprived areas, the ONS found. The estimate for the most deprived areas is the lowest since the time series began in 2013-15, when it stood at 66.3%. For males born in 2020-22, the proportion of life expected to be spent in good health was 70.4% for those in the most deprived areas and 84.5% for those in the least deprived. The figure for males in the most deprived parts of England is broadly unchanged on recent years. The gap in healthy life expectancy between females born in the most and least deprived areas has widened from 19.6 years in 2013-15 to 20.2 years in 2020-22, while for males it has grown from 18.7 to 19.1. Greg Ceely, ONS head of population health monitoring, said: 'The pandemic led to increased mortality, the impact of which is seen in our life expectancy estimates. 'However, not everyone was impacted equally. 'The biggest decline in life expectancy was seen in the most deprived areas. 'Healthy life expectancy also declined, and in England and Wales women in the most deprived areas were expected to spend the lowest proportion of life in 'good' health – the smallest since our records began.' Figures for Wales cannot be compared directly with England, due to different systems of measuring deprivation. But the proportion of life that females born in 2020-22 in the most deprived areas of Wales are likely to spend in good health, 61.5%, is the lowest since those estimates began in 2013-15. The equivalent figure for women born in the least deprived areas is 80.7%. For males in Wales, the proportions were 70.2% for the most deprived areas and 83.6% for the least deprived. Although the latest estimates represent a drop compared with the pre-pandemic period, this does not mean a baby born between 2020 and 2022 will necessarily go on to live a less healthy life. Improvements in mortality rates in the future would lead to increases in life expectancy estimates, the ONS noted.


Telegraph
2 hours ago
- Telegraph
Does Wes need a jab?
Health secretary Wes Streeting wants fat jabs available on the NHS. When I asked him on GB News if he had tried one, he said: 'I have got a complex now. I am never coming on this channel again. Evidently, I have not been on the jabs.' He added: 'I want them to be available on the NHS. I am going to go away and look at my BMI. You have given me a complex.' After the interview, Streeting told his team: 'Cancel the pub – we are going to the gym!' I think he was joking. Present and correct Author Mark Twain once reacted to newspaper accounts that he had died by saying: 'The reports of my death are greatly exaggerated.' Last week there was a Twain moment in London's clubland. Catherine Brumwell, the membership secretary at the Cavalry and Guards Club, wrote to members: 'I appear to have killed off a member who is still very much alive and well. For anyone who reads the In Memoriam, please know that Capt William Matthews, Coldstream Guards, has just called us and assured us that he is in fine fettle.' Surely Capt Matthews is now owed a life membership? Heads won't roll The House of Lords new front door now costs £9.6 million, £3.5 million over budget. 'It is a scandalous waste of public money,' exclaimed Tory peer Andrew Robathan in the Lords, turning to the hideous 10ft high security fence which was erected last month. 'Who gave the security advice on the useless door and the ridiculous and ineffective fence?' he asked. Former National Audit Office chief Amyas Morse has now been asked by Lord Speaker John McFall to find out what has gone wrong. Robathan added: 'Somebody accountable should be identified and should perhaps resign for this terrible waste of public money.' I doubt anyone will. Gnome alone TV personality Gyles Brandreth brushes off claims that the presence of garden gnomes outside a home can knock up to £12,000 off the value of a neighbour's property, telling ITV's This Morning: 'My garden is awash with gnomes – we probably do upset the neighbours.' Perhaps they deter burglars? The history man Historian Andrew Roberts complained in the House of Lords this week: 'The adjective 'historic' is bandied about far too often in politics, covering all sorts of things that are unlikely to detain historians of the future. Football matches, TV shows and any number of announcements in the other place [the Commons] are routinely described as historic when they simply are not. The other day I saw a hamburger described as historic.' Lennon's last call Julia Baird has been looking back on her last ever telephone conversation with her New York-based brother John Lennon on Nov 17, just weeks before his murder in 1980. 'It was nanny's birthday. I'd gone to see her and John phoned. He said, ''I'm looking forward to seeing you all at last.' Nanny had a big house [called Ardmore on the Wirral] and he said, 'It's going to have to be in Ardmore to get you all in at once!'' Julia movingly adds: 'I said, 'We're all waiting, John.'' Lennon was shot in the Big Apple on December 8. Dance legend Debbie Moore, the founder of the Pineapple Dance Studio in central London, is being celebrated with a plaque in Covent Garden where she set up her studios in a derelict pineapple warehouse in 1978. Freddie Mercury was one of the first members and used 'a Coca-Cola bottle for his microphone', she told me. Dancer Wayne Sleep, who lived at the end of the road, will be coming to the unveiling on Thursday. Moore organised a petition of dancers to keep the studio open at one point. She only took up dancing after her Indian guru told her it was 'the quickest way to lose weight'. 'They call me the accidental dancer. I was so inspired by how hard dancers worked,' she says. Moore's the merrier. OJ Chris A celebrity gossip website asked this week: 'Which politician was fined and suspended by the Oxford Union when they were at university in the 1990s – for secretly and illicitly recording a speech by O J Simpson and flogging it to the tabloids?' Step forward shadow home secretary Chris Philp. Philp tells me: 'This was an ingenious way to help make ends meet as an ordinary, struggling south London lad. It was outrageous that OJ was trying to avoid scrutiny by banning the press.' Peterborough, published every Friday at 7pm, is edited by Christopher Hope. You can reach him at peterborough@