Advertisement

Coronavirus: UK medical officials 'snubbed offers from top institutions to boost testing'

Mar 29, 2020; Nashville, TN, USA; Tennessee National Guard member Austin Barnett hands off test swab at a coronavirus assessments and tests driveup site at the Putnam County Health Department in Cookeville on Friday, March 27, 2020. They're among 250 soldiers and airmen mobilized to 35 drive-up testing sites largely in rural areas to assist county health department workers. Another 1,000 guard members are on standby. The state hasn't yet determined how long the sites will remain open. Mandatory Credit: Shelley Mays/The Tennessean via USA TODAY NETWORK/Sipa USA
A Tennessee National Guard member hands off a test swab at a coronavirus assessments and tests driveup site in Tennessee. (AP)

Medical officials have ignored offers of help from some of the UK's leading scientific institutions to boost Britain's rate of coronavirus testing, it has been claimed.

Officials have repeatedly ignored offers from the likes of Oxford University and the renowned Francis Crick Institute involving hundreds of testing machines and trained personnel, according to the Daily Telegraph.

Nations including Germany, South Korea and Australia have already tested hundreds of thousands of their citizens – leaving Britain lagging behind.

Government figures show that fewer than 10,000 tests per day are currently being carried out, compared with 70,000 per day in Germany.

The number of daily tests fell on Tuesday to 8,240, for a total of 143,186 tests since the end of February, the government said.

The Telegraph said senior health sources warned that the window for the UK to launch a successful mass community testing programme may already have been lost.

Latest coronavirus news, updates and advice

Live: Follow all the latest updates from the UK and around the world

Fact-checker: The number of COVID-19 cases in your local area

6 charts and maps that explain how coronavirus is spreading

Professor Matthew Freeman, head of Oxford's Dunn School of Pathology, one of Britain's leading disease research centres, told the paper his repeated offers to provide dozens of specialised machines and expert staff had been largely ignored by Public Health England (PHE).

He said his department had 119 of the crucial PCR machines, or thermal cyclers, used to identify tell-tale genetic signs of coronavirus, but that health officials had accepted only one.

Prof Freeman said some two weeks ago PHE had issued a request for "a very specific model" of PCR machine. His department had one, which was duly collected, but he added: "We have another 118 that can broadly do the same job, but they don't appear to be part of PHE's plans.”

Hundreds of specialist workers and trained graduate students were poised to help increase testing, he said, but despite initial signs of enthusiasm he had heard nothing more from PHE.

"We're clearly not doing as well as we could be doing as a nation when it comes to testing, and therefore people like us feel a bit frustrated," he told the paper.

The Francis Crick Institute, a world-leading biomedical research centre based in London, has given five PCR machines to PHE so far, but is understood to have dozens more.

A spokesman told the paper no firm word had come from PHE as to whether any further machines or expertise would be required.

"We have hundreds of scientists with different areas of expertise ready and willing to step in," the spokesman was quoted as saying.

The Telegraph said other institutions across Britain were understood to have had similar offers of help rejected by PHE.

PHE offered a defence of its response to the outbreak to the paper, saying it had rapidly developed, validated and delivered an accurate test that had spread to 12 different sites in England.

Its spokesman said this represented "the fastest deployment of a novel test to PHE and NHS labs in recent history, including in the swine flu pandemic".

Coronavirus: what happened today

Click here to sign up to the latest news, advice and information with our daily Catch-up newsletter