169
However, throughout the pandemic, our Committees have taken a great interest in what might be...
Conclusion
However, throughout the pandemic, our Committees have taken a great interest in what might be learned and applied from how other countries tackled the virus. In March 2020, the World Health Organisation recommended that nations “plan for surge capacity by establishing decentralized testing capacity in sub-national laboratories”.252 Dr Seon Kui Erica Lee, of the Korea Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, told the Science and Technology Committee in April 2020 that testing capacity in the Republic of Korea had expanded rapidly because of lessons learned from the 2015 MERS outbreak.253 Dr 245 GOV.UK, SAGE 1, 22 January 2020 246 HC oral statement, 23 January 2020, Vol 670 [Commons Chamber] 247 HC oral questions, 20 May 2020, Vol 676 [Commons Chamber] 248 GOV.UK, SAGE 2, 28 January 2020 249 See, for example: oral evidence taken before the Health and Social Care Committee on 19 May 2020, HC (2019– 21) 36 and oral evidence taken before the Science and Technology Committee on 16 April 2020, HC (2019–21) 136 250 Department of Health and Social Care, via Twitter, 11 March 2020 251 Q343 252 World Health Organisation, ‘Laboratory testing strategy recommendations for COVID-19: interim guidance: 23 March 2020’, accessed 17 September 2021 253 Oral evidence taken before the Science and Technology Committee on 8 April 2020, HC (2019–21) 136, Q145 62 Coronavirus: lessons learned to date Max Roser also explained to us that “by mid-March [2020], Germany was testing 50,000 people per day”, whilst the UK was “very late” and reached the same capacity one and a half months later.254
Government Response
Acknowledged
Government Response
Acknowledged
HM Government
Acknowledged
In respect of test, trace and isolate, the government will build on the legacy of the response to this pandemic. As the government has set out in the ‘Living with COVID- 19’ strategy,2 this includes ensuring that a resilient and scalable infrastructure is in place to protect the public from new and existing threats to health. It will involve working closely with local authorities to ensure they have the knowledge, experience, and capability to support future contact tracing arrangements and to draw down expert advice to deploy for greatest public health benefit; for example the capacity to respond to future public health emergencies. UKHSA, established during the pandemic, will also maintain the well-established relationships with local tracing arrangements within all local authorities.
Source
Inquiry
Coronavirus: lessons learnt
Report
Sixth Report - Coronavirus: lessons learned to date
12 Oct 2021
HC 92
Addressee Bodies
Department for Science, Innovation and Technology
Timeline
Recommendation age
4.6 yrs
Report published
12 Oct 2021