Tag: Matt Hancock

  • Matt Hancock – 2022 Comments on Boris Johnson and Rishi Sunak Being Fined for Breaking Rules

    Matt Hancock – 2022 Comments on Boris Johnson and Rishi Sunak Being Fined for Breaking Rules

    The comments made by Matt Hancock, the former Secretary of State for Health and Social Care, on Twitter on 12 April 2022.

    The PM and Chancellor got the big calls right during the pandemic & are now leading the fight against Putin’s illegal war in Ukraine

    They have rightly apologised. We must now move forwards and get on with delivering for people.

  • Matt Hancock – 2021 Comments on Vaccine Uptake

    Matt Hancock – 2021 Comments on Vaccine Uptake

    The comments made by Matt Hancock, the Secretary of State for Health and Social Care, on 23 June 2021.

    The vaccination team have been working incredibly hard to provide people with much-needed protection from this life-threatening disease.

    With more and more evidence emerging on just how effective two doses of our vaccines are in protecting against the Delta variant, it’s a great to see three in five adults have been double jabbed, so we’re well on our way to the whole country getting the fullest possible protection.

    We’re so close now to ensuring the entire adult population is protected – now everyone aged 18 and above can make an appointment, so make sure you book in for your first and second doses as soon as possible.

  • Matt Hancock – 2021 Comments on Clinical Research

    Matt Hancock – 2021 Comments on Clinical Research

    The comments made by Matt Hancock, the Secretary of State for Health and Social Care, on 23 June 2021.

    Clinical research has been vital in our fight against COVID-19 and has saved thousands of lives. Working with the Scottish, Welsh and Northern Ireland governments, our ambitious UK-wide vision for the future of clinical research delivery is essential if we are to build on this exciting and life saving momentum.

    We are making this vision a reality by continuing to work closely with our partners across the UK, the NHS, regulators, industry and medical research sector. We will create a more innovative, resilient and patient-centred clinical research system.

  • Matt Hancock – 2021 Comments on NHS App

    Matt Hancock – 2021 Comments on NHS App

    The comments made by Matt Hancock, the Secretary of State for Health and Social Care, on 19 June 2021.

    Technology undoubtedly plays a huge role in how we deliver healthcare now and in the future and it is great to see so many people downloading, using and benefitting from the NHS App.

    It is vital we embrace the momentum we have built in using technology and innovation in the health and care sector over the last year as we look beyond the pandemic to improve treatment, care and the experiences of patients.

  • Matt Hancock – 2021 Comments about Deliveroo and Covid Support

    Matt Hancock – 2021 Comments about Deliveroo and Covid Support

    The comments made by Matt Hancock, the Secretary of State for Health and Social Care, on 19 June 2021.

    We are using every tool at our disposal to stop the spread of variants of concern, and thanks to Deliveroo, this new partnership will reach even more of the public to help us test as many people as possible and identify variants of concern.

    The government is committed to sending these variants into retreat and through our offer of free, twice-weekly testing combined with the phenomenal progress of our vaccination programme, we are doing everything we can to protect loved ones.

  • Matt Hancock – 2021 Speech at the Virtual NHS Confed Conference

    Matt Hancock – 2021 Speech at the Virtual NHS Confed Conference

    The speech made by Matt Hancock, the Secretary of State for Health and Social Care, on 17 June 2021.

    If I think about the last 18 months, one of the most striking moments for me was a nightshift I did at Basildon hospital in January.

    For me, nothing captures the extraordinary highs and lows of the past 18 months more than when I joined a night shift at Basildon Hospital.

    It was January – the height of the second wave.

    Our vaccine programme was still in its infancy.

    I started the evening by joining NHS colleagues as they got their jabs. It was right at the start of the vaccine programme

    And it was really inspiring to see colleague after colleague being made safe from a disease that, just a year before, didn’t even have a name.

    But that sense of joy gave way to determination, because I then I joined the team on the wards.

    And at that time – across the UK – there were more than 37,000 people in hospital with Covid.

    And they just kept on walking in.

    People. Short of breath. But still talking.

    As the night wore on, I saw some of those patients go onto ventilators.

    And some of them never walked out of that hospital.

    What I saw that night is what so many colleagues have had to endure – day after day, night after night.

    I saw the pressure that one of the most challenged hospitals in the country in terms of COVID was under at the worst moment.

    No matter what walk of life you choose to go in – nobody chooses the pressures that the team faced.

    I was in awe of the compassion – I think that’s the best word for it – and solidarity of colleagues that night in Basildon and everyone across the country who has helped us to face down this terrible disease.

    You have been the very best of us – and we owe you so much.

    And I commit today, to support colleagues across the NHS.

    To give you the support you need to fight for you as we recover, together.

    And as we face the future.

    Reflecting on that night, I’m struck not only by the suffering and the struggle but also by the remarkable fact that this was happening less than 6 months ago and it was happening more or less everywhere.

    We’ve come such a long way since then, to the point where, I can confirm that, as of this afternoon, we have given a first dose of vaccine to 4 out of every 5 adults in the UK.

    And the speed of deployment means that tomorrow we can open vaccination to everyone over the age of 18. I think it’s an incredible achievement on the vaccination side.

    And while there are still just over 1,000 people in hospital with COVID – I’ve just come from the Chelsea and Westminster, where there are none in intensive care, and just 3 in total – and so while there are still those pressures, especially in some parts of the country, we can also take this moment to look forward because we know the vaccine is our way out of this pandemic.

    And as we vaccinate our way out, the scale of the challenges left behind are not diminished.

    And that’s what I wanted to spend a few minutes talking about today.

    My view is that we’ve learned a huge amount together and we’ve got to make sure we embed those lessons as we recover.

    And as your excellent new Chief Executive Matthew Taylor said yesterday:

    “Now is the time to fulfil our duty to the 130,000 who have died – and the millions who have suffered or been bereaved by COVID” to “make this a turning point from which we build the best health system in the world.”

    And I agree with every word and I honestly believe, from the bottom of my heart that we can fulfil the NHS’s potential to be the best health service in the world.

    We have at our disposal what is needed to make that truly happen.

    And if we work together in that common mission, then we can make that dream a reality.

    So today I want to directly address this question: how do we discharge that duty, collectively and together?

    Because, this can only be done if we do work collectively together on that common mission.

    In fact, that common mission was one of the features of dealing with the pandemic and one of the reasons that people could come together, and people did come together in a remarkable way.

    I believe – from the conversations I’ve had with so many of you – that there is a remarkably strong consensus on what needs to happen to make the NHS the best it possibly can be.

    And I commit to you today to play my part in the reforms we all know we need.

    I want to take a few minutes to set out how I see it: the lessons we need to learn and what we need to do.

    But I promise you this in terms of attitude and my approach as Secretary of State: I have no utopian blueprint.

    I have no monopoly on the plan that we must co-create.

    I see my job as one of many, many people, driving the change we all want to see.

    I see my job as playing my part in making the system work for those who work in the system.

    And the way I think of it is this.

    The service the NHS provides is a function 3 things: the level of demand from citizens; resources that we have to serve that demand; and how we use those resources, innovatively and effectively.

    Demand. Resources. And innovation.

    It’s a triangle, if you like, where each side supports the other 2.

    We need to think about all 3, and how they interact.

    What’s going to happen to demand – and what we can do, through preventative action, to reduce it.

    The resources that we have – which means not just the money, important as that is, but the real-world resources like trained staff and capacity.

    And innovation: locking in the lessons we’ve learned through the pandemic and our vaccine rollout and embracing the chance to do things differently, to do things better, to make the changes that will help us take on other missions with the same sense of innovation and integration and passion and mission that we’ve seen these past 18 months.

    So let me just go through each of those 3 sides of that triangle.

    Recovery

    Of course, one of the great consequences, one of the significant consequences of the pandemic is the scale of the elective backlog.

    The size of that backlog and how quickly we can address it depends on all 3 of these factors: demand, resources and innovation.

    So we need to be clear about what we know and about what we don’t yet know.

    We can all see demand returning and our emergency departments filling up.

    We know there are already 5.1 million people in England waiting for care at this moment.

    Now, thankfully, the latest figures actually show a fall in the number of people waiting over a year which demonstrates the efforts already underway.

    And I know that as I sit here today, that recovery has begun, and I’m very, very grateful to everybody for their part in it.

    But we all know, there is so much more to do.

    Demand

    Let’s turn first to demand. The first part of this triangle is to think about both the demand that can return and also think about what we can do to prevent demand in the future.

    We know that our figures don’t yet include the returning demand of those people who have not come forward for care during the pandemic but are now regaining the confidence to approach the NHS.

    And we know that as people re-present with problems – problems they might not have wanted to bother the NHS with over the last 18 months – we will see the waiting list go up.

    What we don’t know is the exact scale of this pent-up demand.

    But to give a sense of the scale of the challenge, during the pandemic, 7.1 million fewer patients were added to the waiting list for diagnosis and elective treatment.

    So 7.1 million fewer clock-ons.

    Now some of those people will return.

    Some of the issued will have been resolved without the need for care.

    But we must be prepared.

    Even with the system running at 100 percent, even with everybody working incredibly hard, that if all of that demand came back, we would have the biggest pressure on the NHS in its history.

    I am determined that we rise to this challenge and I know, from everything we’ve done together, that we will.

    So we’re then turning to resources. We are putting in the extra resources, we’re hiring the extra people and building the extra capacity.

    But on the demand side, it’s also critical that we use preventative care to help reduce that demand.

    And then I’ll turn to the great promise of innovation because of new technology, that we have, possibly the greatest wave of innovation in the history of our NHS that is going on right now.

    Overall, I can you this: the direction of travel towards integration and population health – that journey we are all on, that will be critical to addressing these pressures too.

    Because our new approach, based on the concept of population health, will help us reduce future demand across primary care, emergency care and mental health across all areas

    By using the collective resources of the local system, the NHS, local authorities, the voluntary sector and all others who we can bring to bear on this to improve the health of the nation.

    So that’s the first part – demand – and it’s about acknowledging the scale of the demand that may come back and it’s about making sure that we use a population health approach and preventative measures to reduce the scale of demand in the future. Those 2 things are not inconsistent. On the contrary, they are vitally side by side and collaborative

    Resources

    The next question is resources.

    We’re providing the NHS with unprecedented levels of funding.

    Today, healthcare funding for COVID-19 alone stands at £92 billion.

    In March we committed £7 billion of further funding – including £1 billion of the Elective Recovery Fund.

    And the most important resource of all, is colleagues’ time.

    And in that spirit, we are bringing in more colleagues to join.

    Since last March we’ve recruited over 5,600 more doctors, over 10,800 nurses, and in total there are more than 58,300 more staff in hospital and community health services.

    So resources, both funding and people, are both absolutely critical to addressing the challenges that we face. And that is the second side of the triangle.

    Innovation

    But everybody knows, we’ve got to use our resources as wisely as possible.

    To truly change how we deliver care in this country, we have to make the changes that allow the spirit of innovation that was unleased by the pandemic and embraced by the workforce – to fly. We have to allow that spirit to fly.

    Reforming diagnostics, with community diagnostic hubs.

    Embracing telemedicine like never before.

    Using NHS 111 as a first port of call.

    The nation’s new-found love of NHS apps.

    Collaborative working within systems and across networks.

    Cancer alliances.

    The Orthopaedic Network.

    Getting it right first time.

    And collaboration. Collaboration. Collaboration. Like never before.

    In the pandemic, we worked as one team – and we must never let that go.

    So, if you think about it, we’re transforming more or less every aspect of health and care in this country art this moment.

    And I think it’s worth dwelling on a few of these big reforms.

    Starting with our Health and Care Bill.

    We know we’re at our best when we work as one.

    The best example is how we’ve deployed over 70 million jabs in little over 6 months by putting traditional organisational boundaries to one side.

    Every time you go to a vaccination centre, there are different people with different lanyards from different organisations: NHS organisations, primary care, secondary care, community care, people from outside the NHS, people from local authorities, the armed forces and volunteers, people with all sorts of organisational backgrounds coming together. We have done so much to break down silos.

    That’s the spirit of our Health and Care Bill.

    The Bill will make it easier to do the right thing, tackling bureaucracy and freeing up the system to innovate and to embrace technology, giving staff and patients a better platform for care.

    Just look at the work that’s already saved lives during the pandemic.

    The QCovid model used anonymous GP records to work out which patients would be a greatest risk from Coronavirus and it led to us adding 1.5 million people to our Shielded Patient List back in February and put them at the front of the queue for the vaccine.

    And I pay tribute to Dr Jenny Harries whose gone on to be the Chief Executive of UKSA in the work that she did.

    Or the remarkable things NHSX were doing with Dr Matthew Knight at Watford General Hospital with virtual wards: remotely monitoring patients’ heart rates, oxygen levels, temperatures and flagging to clinicians early when there was any deterioration. And now that model is being used so much more widely.

    Or ‘Everybody In’, where the NHS worked hand in hand with partners in local government to support 37,000 vulnerable people and rough sleepers.

    We can do more of this and we can do it together.

    And of course this team work, this partnership is delivered locally.

    And by god, if we’ve learned anything from the pandemic, we’ve learned the importance of working in partnership with others like local authorities, the NHS, and so many others.

    Integrated Care Systems are designed to support and drive this local partnership, draw on local expertise, and transform how we do public health in this country too.

    And they are put on a statutory footing in a bill that is forthcoming very soon. And by April 2022, the system approach, with its underpinning in law, will remove a huge amount of the barriers to integration that still exist, and help strengthen further that culture of collaboration which has built up so much over the past 18 months.

    That’s the second big reform that’s going on. Which is reforms to how we do public health in this country.

    We know prevention is better than cure – but rarely has it been so starkly apparent than in the past 18 months. For instance, when obesity emerged as a major factor in how ill you can get if you get COVID.

    So now we’re putting the power of the NHS budget in an area behind the prevention agenda,

    giving ICSs the statutory powers, and the budget, to help people stay healthy in the first place.

    Because we know a population health approach will be critical to managing that demand on the NHS in the years and decades ahead

    And with the new UKHSA taking the lead on our health security, that vital health promotion work – on obesity, diabetes, smoking, and so much else – all of that is finally getting the dedicated focus it deserves with national leadership, under the Chief Medical Officer, from the new Office for Health Promotion at a national level, and working with Local Authorities and directors of public health, and through systems, at a local level.

    The third area where there’s major reform going is of course in mental health, which is just as important as physical health is our mental health.

    There’s been over a generation, a revolution in how society thinks about mental health, and rightly so.

    We recommit today to the noble goal that mental and physical health should have parity.

    And to deliver that, we are increasing funding in mental health faster than elsewhere in the NHS and we will bring our mental health legislation into the 21st century.

    The reforms to the Mental Health Act will improve services for the most serious illnesses and support people to manage their own mental health better.

    The legislation will tackle the disparities and inequities of our system, improving how people with learning difficulties and autism are supported and ultimately, it’s going to be there for every single one of us, should we need it.

    And just as these changes in mental health have been needed for too long, later this year, we will also bring forward much-needed reforms in social care too.

    Data strategy

    And the golden thread that runs through all these changes, all of these areas of reform on integration, on public health, on mental health, on social care: the golden thread is better use of data.

    Even by the rapid standards of data-driven technologies, this has been a phenomenal period of progress when we’ve seen a decade of change packed into just over a year.

    At the start of the pandemic, 3 million people had an Enhanced Summary Care Record. Now that has increased to over 56 million people.

    And we know that data saves lives.

    It’s how we identified some the most vulnerable in this pandemic.

    It’s how hospitals supported each other across systems when they were under the greatest pressure they’ve ever faced.

    It’s how we found treatments for COVID. And we found them here in the UK because we have the data systems to support the best clinical trials in the world within the NHS.

    And across the health and care system, people are now using data more fluently, with more confidence, more effectively than ever before.

    The urgency of the pandemic has spurred us on and this is not the moment to slow. On the contrary.

    So we are publishing our new data strategy next week on how we can use the power of data to tackle the challenges ahead.

    And ultimately, it’s our use of data, – not simply legislation – that will drive the greatest reshaping of our health and care landscape and I’m excited about what we can achieve together in the years to come.

    And I want to tell you a story about how important this is that really brings this home for me. On a night shift a couple of years ago, I remember being in a room with a lady who had suffered a cardiac arrest and the alarm went off and a dozen or so people went into the room to support her, and she had a tracheotomy so she couldn’t speak and she was clearly in very significant trouble.

    But the problem was that no one knew her medical condition. They didn’t know what her status was. And they couldn’t find out until a consultant literally wheeled in a trolley with packs of paperwork on and started rifling through it to find her clinical records and then stood on a chair, reading out the crucial parts from these clinical record that were written by hand and she struggled to read the handwriting.

    That was 2 years ago, and it’s no way to run a modern health service.

    Thankfully it’s changing faster than it ever has done in the past. But imagine an NHS in which you can access right data, the right information, at the right time with the touch of a button, as easily as you can check the weather on your phone.

    That is where the NHS must be.

    Saving lives. Improving patient safety. Empowering our team to deliver the best care they can through the best data architecture: that is the fuel for innovation too.

    In its 73-year history, the NHS has faced countless challenges.

    But none can compare to what we have collectively faced over these past 18 months.

    Your extraordinary feats are unsurpassed, even in the proud history of the NHS.

    Not only have you risen to meet the most unimaginable kinds of pressures brought by the pandemic, but you’ve done it with a passion, determination and innovation and that will make us even better still.

    So let us “fulfil our duty to build the best health system in the world”.

    And I commit to you, to give you everything I can to deliver on this mission to build back better and, together, fulfil the promise of the NHS in brighter days ahead.

    Thank you very much indeed.

  • Matt Hancock – 2021 Statement on Covid-19

    Matt Hancock – 2021 Statement on Covid-19

    The statement made by Matt Hancock, the Secretary of State for Health and Social Care, on 14 June 2021.

    Mr Speaker, these past six months, we have all been involved in a race between the vaccine and the virus. Our vaccination programme has been delivered at incredible pace: we have delivered 71 million doses into 41 million arms; and over 93% of people aged 40 and over have now received at least one dose. Because of this pace, we are able to open up vaccinations to those aged 23 and 24 tomorrow.

    It is this protection that has allowed us to take the first three steps of our road map, meaning that right now we have one of the most open economies and societies in Europe. We have been able to remove the most burdensome of the restrictions and restore so many of the freedoms that we hold dear. At every stage, we have looked at the data, set against the four tests that the Prime Minister set out to this House in February. The fourth of those tests is that our assessment of the risk is not fundamentally changed by new variants of concern.

    The delta variant now accounts for over 90% of cases across the country. We know that the delta variant spreads more easily and there is evidence that the risk of hospitalisation is higher than for the previously dominant alpha variant. Case numbers are rising, up 64% on last week in England, but the whole purpose of vaccination is to break the link between cases and hospitalisations and deaths. That link is clearly weaker than it once was. However, over the past week, we have seen hospitalisations start to rise; up by 50%. Thankfully, the number of deaths has not risen and remains very low.

    Sadly, before the vaccine, we saw that a rise in hospitalisations inevitably led to a rise in deaths a couple of weeks later. The vaccine in changing that, but it is simply too early to know how effectively the link to deaths has been broken. We do know that, after a single dose of the vaccine, the effectiveness is lower against the delta variant, at around 33% reduction in symptomatic disease. However, the good news, confirmed with new data published today, is that two doses of the vaccine are just as effective against hospital admission with the delta variant compared with the alpha variant. In fact, once you have had two doses, the vaccines may be even slightly more effective against hospitalisation if you have caught the new delta variant. This gives me confidence that, while the protection comes more from the second dose, and so takes longer to reach, the protection we will get after that second jab is highly effective—and, if anything, slightly better—against the delta variant. So, for the purpose of the restrictions, while it will take us a little longer to build the full protection we need through the vaccine, all the science is telling us that we will get there. Of course, all this says that it is so important that everyone gets both doses when the call comes. Even today, I have had messages from people who have had their jab, and I am so grateful to each and every person for making our country safer. At every stage of the road map, we have taken the time to check it is safe to take the next step. Our task is to make sure the vaccine can get ahead in the race between the vaccine and the virus.

    I know that so many people have been working so hard, making sacrifices, being cautious and careful, and doing their bit to help this country down the road map. I know that people have been planning and arranging important moments and that businesses have been gearing up to reopen. So it is with a heavy heart, and faced with this reality, that we have made the difficult decision not to move ahead with step 4 next week. Instead, we will pause for up to four weeks until 19 July, with a review of the data after two weeks. During this crucial time, we will be drawing on everything we know works when fighting this virus and will use the extra time to deliver the extra protection we need.

    Despite the incredible uptake we have seen in this country, there are still people we need to protect: 1.3 million people who are over 50 and 4.5 million over-40s have had a first jab but not yet a second. The pause will save thousands of lives by allowing us to get the majority of these second jabs done before restrictions are eased further. We are today reducing the time from first to second jab for all people aged 40 and over from 12 weeks to eight weeks to accelerate the programme. If, like me, you are in your 40s and you have a second jab booked 12 weeks after your first, the NHS will be in touch to bring it forward, or you can rebook on the national booking service. Our aim is that around two thirds of all adults will have had both doses by 19 July. I can tell the House that we have been able to deliver the vaccine programme faster than planned, so we can bring forward the moment when we will have offered every adult a first dose of the vaccine to 19 July, too. In this race between the vaccine and the virus, we are giving the vaccine all the support we can.

    We have always said that we will ease restrictions as soon as we are able safely to do so. Even though we cannot take step 4 on Monday, I am pleased that we are able carefully to ease restrictions in some areas. We are removing the 30-person gathering limit for weddings, receptions and commemorative events—subject, of course, to social distancing guidelines. I am very grateful for the work of the weddings taskforce on this relaxation. We will be running another phase of our pilots for large events at higher capacities, including some at full capacity, like the Wimbledon finals. We are easing rules in care homes, including removing the requirement for residents to isolate for 14 days after visits out, and we are allowing out-of-school settings to organise residential visits in bubbles of up to 30 children, in line with the current position for schools. I thank my hon. Friend the Member for Altrincham and Sale West (Sir Graham Brady) for his work in this area.

    Even though we have not been able to take the full step as we wanted, I know that these cautious changes will mean a lot to many people and move us a little bit closer to normal life. As we do this, we will keep giving people the support they need. We are extending our asymptomatic testing offer until the end of July. We have put in place one of the most extensive financial support packages in the world, and we will continue to deliver enhanced support for the worst-affected areas.

    We have seen how this approach can work—for example, in Bolton. Cases in Bolton have fallen by almost a third over the past three weeks. Even as hospitalisations have risen across the north-west, in Bolton, they have fallen by more than half. Last week, we introduced enhanced support in Greater Manchester and Lancashire, and I can now tell the House that we are extending these extra measures—surge testing, cautious guidance and extra resources for vaccination—to Birmingham, Blackpool, Cheshire, including Warrington, and the Liverpool city region. We know from experience that this approach can work, but we need everyone to play their part, so I urge everyone in these areas to get tested and to come forward for the support that is on offer. When you get the call, get the jab and help keep us on the road to recovery.

    Finally, none of this would be possible without our vaccine programme. Without the vaccine, faced with these rising cases and hospitalisations, the clinical recommendation would have been to go back towards lockdown. The Vaccines Taskforce is critical to the work to deliver supplies, the work on booster jabs and ensuring we are protected for the future. Dame Kate Bingham did a formidable job in melding the best possible team, and I would like to congratulate her and everyone else who was recognised in Her Majesty’s birthday honours this weekend. I am delighted to be able to tell the House that Sir Richard Sykes, one of Britain’s most acknowledged biochemists and industry leaders, has agreed to take up the position of chair of the VTF. Sir Richard brings to bear experience from leadership positions in both the public and the private sectors, and I am delighted to have him on board to lead the team in the next stage of this mission.

    This race between the vaccines and the virus is not over yet. These difficult restrictions challenge our lives in so many ways, but they play a vital role in holding the virus back and protecting people while we get these jabs done. So let us all play our part to keep us safe from this dreadful disease. I commend this statement to the House.

  • Matt Hancock – 2021 Comments on 40 Million Receiving First Vaccine

    Matt Hancock – 2021 Comments on 40 Million Receiving First Vaccine

    The comments made by Matt Hancock, the Secretary of State for Health and Social Care, on 5 June 2021.

    It is an astonishing achievement to deliver over 40 million first doses in just 6 months. In all 4 corners of the UK, people are stepping up when their time comes to protect themselves and the people around them.

    It seems with every day we pass another major milestone on the road back to recovery. Over three-quarters of adults have received a first dose and over half of adults have now been vaccinated with the life-saving second dose.

    I pay tribute to the tireless work of the NHS and armed forces in building this momentum – but our work is not yet done. I encourage everyone who is eligible to join the millions who have the fullest possible protection from this virus by getting their jab when the time comes.

  • Matt Hancock – 2021 Comments on the Health Security Chain

    Matt Hancock – 2021 Comments on the Health Security Chain

    The comments made by Matt Hancock, the Secretary of State for Health and Social Care, on 3 June 2021.

    Globally we are only as strong as the weakest link in the health security chain. No one is safe until everyone is safe.

    We need to make better use of advances in our ability to collect, analyse, and share health data from all aspects of life, enabling faster collaboration to respond to health security threats and stop diseases in their tracks.

    The UK and our partners in the G7 have a strong track record of working together to support each other and protect the most vulnerable. As I gather with my ministerial counterparts, we have an opportunity to learn from this pandemic to collectively build back better and safeguard our global health security.

  • Matt Hancock – 2021 Statement on Covid-19

    Matt Hancock – 2021 Statement on Covid-19

    The statement made by Matt Hancock, the Secretary of State for Health and Social Care, in the House of Commons on 27 May 2021.

    Good afternoon and welcome to Downing Street for today’s coronavirus briefing.

    I’m joined by Dr Jenny Harries, Chief Executive of UKHSA, the UK Health Security Agency.

    Every day, we are unwavering in our focus to protect life and keep our nation safe from this deadly virus. And today, I’d like to bring you up to speed on our response, starting with the latest data.

    The latest data show that the number of cases is now rising.

    Yesterday we saw 3,542 new cases, the highest since 12 April. The variant first identified in India – B.1.617.2 – is still spreading, and the latest estimates are that more than half, and potentially as much as three quarters, of all new cases are now of this variant.

    As we set our roadmap we always expected cases to rise. We must remain vigilant.

    The aim is to break the link to hospitalisation and death so that cases alone no longer require stringent restrictions on people’s lives.

    The critical thing to watch is the link from the number cases, to how many people end up in hospital.

    The increase in cases remains focused in hotspots, and we’re doing all we can to tackle this variant, wherever it flares up.

    Over the past 6 months, we now have built a huge testing capacity at our disposal.

    And we’re using this for surge testing in the 8 hotspot areas, and in other places where cases are lower, but rising.

    In the hotspot areas, we’re surging vaccines too, for those who are eligible.

    In Bolton, for instance, we’ve done 17,147 vaccinations in the last week.

    All the available evidence shows that the best way to protect yourself, your loves ones and your community against this new variant is to get both jabs.

    Of the 49 people who are in hospital with COVID in Bolton, only 5 have had both vaccine doses.

    Earlier today I spoke this afternoon to Fiona Noden, CEO of Bolton Foundation Trust, and her message is very clear.

    The hospital is functioning well and is open to all those who need it.

    But people need to be careful and cautious and follow the rules, and take personal responsibility to help to slow the spread.

    She also said that, and I quote: “I dread to think where we’d be without the vaccine, so please ask people to come forward and get the jab”.

    So, when you get the call, get the jab and make sure you come forward for your second dose so you can get the maximum possible protection.

    The vaccine is severing the link between cases and hospitalisations, and deaths from coronavirus.

    This week’s ONS data shows that 3 in 4 adults now have COVID-19 antibodies, including over 90% of people aged 50 and above. This means the vast majority of those most vulnerable to this virus have that protection that antibodies provide.

    But I want to see those rates climb further. Having 3 in 4 adults with antibodies is important but there’s more still to do.

    And today’s data from Public Health England show why this is important. They have estimated that over the last week, the vaccination programme has prevented a further 200 deaths and prevented a further 600 people from going into hospital.

    Bringing these figures together, it means that in total 13,200 deaths have been prevented, and 39,700 hospitalisations by the vaccination programme.

    The case for getting the jab has never been stronger and we’re putting jabs in arms as quickly as humanly possible.

    We’ve given in fact 4.1 million vaccines over the past week, which is the highest figure since March.

    And I’m delighted to see how this is rolling out to different parts of the country. Thanks to the incredible hard work of colleagues across the Midlands – including Andy Street, the Mayor of the West Midlands, NHS colleagues right across the Midlands, and so many others – we’ve today hit the milestone of 10 million vaccines being delivered across the Midlands.

    In the South West, where I was earlier this week, visiting vaccination centres as far flung as the Isles of Scilly, over 5 million doses have been delivered.

    Three quarters of adults in the South West have now had their first dose.

    And over half have had both doses. This is the highest proportion in the country.

    All in all this rapid progress in the roll-out of vaccines in this race between the virus and the vaccines – this rapid roll-out means yesterday we were able to open up vaccinations to all those aged 30 and above.

    And I would urge everybody to come forward.

    Next week, I’ll be hosting the G7 health ministers at the health ministers summit in Oxford.

    Oxford has been at the cutting edge of science during this pandemic. They led the RECOVERY trial that uncovered treatments that have saved millions of lives across the world, and of course they developed the Oxford vaccine, which is Britain’s gift to the world. That has now been deployed, without any profit margin, to 450 million doses across the world.

    Today, I can update you that half a million people here have now signed up to our Vaccine Research Registry. The Vaccine Research Registry is about having a group of people who are prepared to take part in clinical trials. They have signed up to say they are ready and willing to take part.

    This is important because our world-leading position in the discovery of new medicines relies on these clinical trials. I’m incredibly grateful to the half a million people who are all playing their part

    Today, I can announce that, together with CEPI, the global vaccination effort, we’ve funded the expansion of another important Oxford study which is the first in the world to look at whether different vaccines can be safely used as part of a 2-dose regime.

    Using different vaccines, if they can be mixed without reducing effectiveness – or indeed mixed and lead to an increase in effectiveness – then this could have a huge impact in speeding up vaccination campaigns all across the world and getting more people the protection that is needed from this deadly virus.

    It has the potential to transform lives globally and it’s brilliant, frankly, to see that, once again, research that is taking place on our shores and our universities is leading the way.

    One of the most promising areas of new research is into antivirals.

    The thing about antivirals is that you can give them to people in an area of an outbreak to reduce their chance of catching COVID if they come into contact with somebody who has got it.

    So, for instance, you can use antivirals to help suppress an outbreak.

    These antivirals are not yet approved, and the Prime Minister has set the goal of having 2 available later this year.

    Antivirals can treat people early, preventing a mild disease becoming something much more serious and can be used as a prophylactic, preventing the virus from spreading.

    I’m absolutely determined that our Antivirals Taskforce will channel the same positive, can-do, collaborative spirit that worked so successfully for vaccines.

    I’m pleased to be able to announce that Eddie Gray has been appointed as Chair. Eddie brings a wealth of experience from his time at GSK and at Dynavax and I know Eddie will make a huge contribution at this time of national need.

    Our response to this pandemic is been a big team effort and Eddie’s leadership will help make our team stronger still.

    It’s this team – this collective endeavour that you’ve been a part of – that has got us this far. But this pandemic is not yet over.

    So please, keep doing your bit.

    Remember the basics: hands, face, space and fresh air get your rapid, regular tests, and when you get the call, get both jabs.

    Now I’d like to hand over to Dr Harries to talk through the latest data in a bit more detail.