Hundreds more Covid test centres to open so every Brit is within 30 minute walk of testing site
HUNDREDS more coronavirus test centres will be opened to make it as convenient as possible for Brits to get checked.
Health bosses want everyone in towns and cities to have a Covid testing facility within a 30 minute walk of their home by the end of October.
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It comes as the Government prepares for a possible surge in virus cases this winter - as experts warn a vaccine won't be ready before Christmas.
At least a few hundred walk-in testing centres are to be established in towns and cities based on how easily people could push a buggy to one.
Those heading the NHS Test and Trace programme are also recruiting more people to work in local health protection teams as the system scales up to deal with any rise in cases in the colder months.
Winter woes
Experts including England's chief medical officer Professor Chris Whitty have warned of a potential second wave of Covid-19 cases in the winter.
Prof Whitty told MPs on Tuesday: "A surge in winter is a really serious concern looking forward and where I spend most of my thinking time."
People tend to stay indoors more in the colder months, where the virus transmits more easily, and ventilation is reduced as they keep their doors and windows closed.
It comes as figures show NHS Test and Trace is failing to reach adequate numbers of people who may be ill in places with the highest infection rates.
The Government has pledged to publish regional data but has not done so yet.
Bradford Council told the PA news agency its data-sharing agreement with the Government means its figures on how many people have been traced cannot be shared with the media.
A Bradford Council spokeswoman said: "There is a high number of contacts which are not able to be traced through the national tracing system in Bradford district.
"We understand this is not unusual and other places are seeing the same kind of statistics.
"With this in mind, we are asking Government to allow us to set up a local extension to the national Test and Trace system which would enable us to follow-up uncontacted data with door-to-door visits, something which no national system can really do."
Kirklees Council confirmed that 77 per cent of close contacts in its area had been traced in the most recent data.
This is below the 80 per cent the Scientific Advisory Group for Emergencies (Sage) says need to be contacted within 48 hours if the system is to work.
The Guardian also reported that in Luton, which has the sixth highest infection rate in England, only 47 per cent of at-risk people were contacted by NHS Test and Trace.
In Leicester, which remains under a partial lockdown, the rate was 65 per cent - meaning more than 3,300 people were not reached by the national programme, the report said.
In Blackburn with Darwen the figure was 54 per cent, and in Rochdale it was 66 per cent.
Lisa McNally, director of public health at Sandwell council in the West Midlands, which has the ninth highest infection rate in the country, said only 40 per cent of positive coronavirus cases in her area had been contacted by the national system last week.
PM's pledge
The most recent NHS Test and Trace data, published today, shows Prime Minister Boris Johnson's pledge to have all in-person tests back within 24 hours is not being met.
The proportion of people receiving their Covid-19 result within 24 hours of being tested at a regional site or mobile testing unit - a so-called "in-person" test - has fallen for the second week in a row.
Some 71.4 per cent of people received the result within 24 hours in the week ending July 15, down from 87.7 per cent in the week to July 8 and 90.7 per cent in the week to July 1.
Since the launch of Test and Trace, 169,546 close contacts of people who have tested positive for Covid-19 have been reached through the system and asked to self-isolate.
This is 83.6 per cent out of a total of 202,781 people identified as close contacts.
The weekly figures show 77.9 per cent of close contacts were reached in the week ending July 15, up from 72 per cent in the previous week, but down on the 90.7 per cent reached in the first week of Test and Trace.
Meanwhile, MPs have demanded all NHS staff must be tested weekly for Covid by early autumn.
The influential Commons’ Health Select Committee says widespread screening is needed by September to help prevent a deadly second spike.
It comes after leading scientists said almost half of frontline hospital workers were infected with the bug in April.
Routine testing has already been introduced in care homes.
But England’s top doctor, Professor Chris Whitty, said it is too soon to do the same in hospitals.
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Earlier this week, the Chief Medical Officer said the ideal levels of NHS staff testing are unclear.
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In a letter to the Health Secretary and the head of the health service, committee chairman Jeremy Hunt said there “should be no further delays”.
He said: “NHS staff want to know they will get the weekly testing that has now been offered to care home staff so they can be confident they won't pass on infections to patients.”