AAPL 169.3 -0.6047% MSFT 395.125 1.4885% GOOG 165.555 0.5558% GOOGL 163.795 0.6235% AMZN 178.86 2.2057% NVDA 830.03 -3.9339% META 439.1 2.0759% TSLA 179.995 -1.7923% TSM 134.94 -1.7475% LLY 776.75 -0.5569% V 267.29 -0.4914% AVGO 1242.86 -4.4152% JPM 191.86 0.0626% UNH 484.11 0.0848% NVO 129.21 0.7014% WMT 58.82 -0.893% LVMUY 164.02 -0.0792% XOM 116.06 -1.8686% LVMHF 822.33 -0.4443% MA 442.07 -2.0235%

General news

Matt Hancock admits protective ring around care homes was not ‘unbroken circle’

Matt Hancock has admitted the so-called protective ring he said had been put around care homes early in the coronavirus pandemic was not an unbroken one, as he insisted he understands the strength of feeling people have on the issue.

The former health secretary, who appeared before the UK Covid-19 Inquiry on Thursday, was questioned on his use of the phrase at a Downing Street press conference on May 15 2020.

On that day, he said: “Right from the start, we’ve tried to throw a protective ring around our care homes.”

Lead counsel to the inquiry, Hugo Keith KC, put it to him that such a phrase could be open to interpretation but that there was an argument that it gave the impression there was “an impermeable barrier” in the care sector at the time.

Mr Hancock said he had been “trying to simply summarise that we had taken action”, including giving money to the care sector in March and April, providing PPE (personal protective equipment) and having infection control guidance in place.

Mr Hancock said: “I entirely understand why people feel strongly about this and when I first said that, I then went on to explain what I meant.”

Mr Keith quoted England’s former deputy chief medical officer, Professor Sir Jonathan Van-Tam, who said in his statement to the inquiry: “My view is a ring is a circle without a break in it.”

Addressing Mr Hancock, the barrister asked: “However you describe the protective processes you put in place around the care sector, they did not form an unbroken circle, did they?”

Former health secretary Matt Hancock gave a full day of evidence at the inquiry into the pandemic (UK Covid-19 Inquiry/PA)
Matt Hancock gave a full day of evidence at the inquiry (UK Covid-19 Inquiry/PA)

Mr Hancock replied: “It is quite clear from the evidence that Professor Van-Tam is right.”

The inquiry also heard that Mr Hancock’s then-media adviser had warned him there might be a problem with the accuracy of Mr Hancock having told then-prime minister Boris Johnson that care homes had been “locked down” before the rest of the country.

A WhatsApp message from the adviser to Mr Hancock on May 13, shown to the inquiry, said: “Matt, we might have some issues with you telling the PM we ‘locked down’ care homes before the rest of the country.”

Mr Hancock told the inquiry: “It depends on how you define locked down.”

He said he had been trying to respond to a criticism at the time that action to protect people in care homes had come later than locking down the rest of the country, which he said “was not true”.

Mr Keith said Mr Hancock’s adviser had set out the measures in place from mid-March for care homes, which included reviewing visitor policy and emphasising good hand hygiene for visitors.

Mr Keith said: “In no universe, Mr Hancock, could those measures possibly be described as locking down the care homes.”

Mr Hancock replied: “I think that’s what Jamie (the adviser) was trying to tell me.”