Yorkshire care boss calls for 'urgent, short and total lockdown' to prevent rising deaths

Yorkshire social care providers have urged the Government to implement an “urgent, short and total lockdown” to stop care home residents from dying.

The Independent Care Group (ICG), which represents providers in York and North Yorkshire, has said it is time to end the confusion and hold the so-called ‘circuit-breaker’ lockdown as other countries in the UK have.

Yesterday’s figures from the Office for National Statistics show 63 people died from Covid-19 in care and nursing homes across England and Wales in the week ending October 9, up from 46 the previous week and the highest total since July.

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The ICG fears the picture could be much worse once the time delay is considered.

ICG Chair Mike Padgham. Photo: JPI MediaICG Chair Mike Padgham. Photo: JPI Media
ICG Chair Mike Padgham. Photo: JPI Media

Deaths have been rising in recent weeks, and some 15,712 people died from Covid-19 in these homes from December 28 to October 9. ICG Chair Mike Padgham said: “Reluctantly, I think the time has come for a short, sharp lockdown to try to stop the second wave in its tracks.

“We are now starting to see more significant increases in the number of Covid-19 deaths in care and nursing homes and we have to act quickly.

"These figures are a week or two behind, so I would expect the reality to be somewhat worse.

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“As care providers we see that these are people’s loved ones – a wife, a husband, a mother, a father, an aunt, an uncle, a brother or sister.

“We cannot let Covid-19 take so many people as it did in the first wave.”

Chancellor Rishi Sunak failed to rule out harsher lockdown measures when challenged by Labour yesterday, but added that a “localised approach is the best approach”.

Ms Dodds warned that not undertaking a circuit-breaker now “could cost our economy £150bn” and asked the Chancellor if he had estimated the costs of not

implementing harsher restrictions.

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Mr Sunak said: “The honourable lady talks about a rolling programme. It’s very clear that the party opposite thinks we should have a rolling programme of national lockdowns. What I can tell her is that would be enormously damaging for people’s jobs and livelihoods causing unnecessary pain and suffering in parts of the country where the virus prevalence is low. A localised approach is the best approach.”

Mr Padgham said he knew that any lockdown would have an impact on the economy, but it had to happen. “Yes, we have to protect the economy but first and foremost we have to protect people’s lives and the lives of the staff caring for them,” he added.

“It feels inevitable that if we don’t lockdown now, we will have to do so soon and probably for a longer time, doing even more damage to the economy.

“At the moment we have people travelling all over the place, from areas of high infection rate to low areas, so the virus is bound to spread and spread.

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“It is regrettable, but I feel the only way is to lock down again and protect our oldest and most vulnerable in particular, until we can regain control.”

Families have felt “bereft of involvement” in saying goodbye to loved ones due to pandemic restrictions, according to a new nursing survey.

Staff involved in end of life care said families had received terrible news over the phone, while a dying woman felt unable to choose which one of her children should be her sole visitor in her final days, a poll of 893 nurses and caring staff for Nursing Standard and the Marie Curie charity found.

The poll of 893 nurses and caring staff for Nursing Standard and the Marie Curie charity found more than two thirds (70 per cent) had found it harder to have compassionate conversations with patients’ families about end of life care during the pandemic.