Monday 27 April 2020

Quarantine measures may be introduced at UK airports?

John Holland -Kaye Boss of Heathrow Airport

John Holland, -Kaye, the boss of Heathrow airport, is urging the Government to introduce mass screenings for passengers - temperature checks, antibody tests, and a requirement that passengers carry health passports to "prove they're medically fit." He thinks that British airports are coming under unfair criticism over the Government's decision not to test.


At a time when British citizens are being advised to stay at home and to keep three metres apart and face prosecution and fines for violating lock-down restrictions, you might find it astonishing, that a government source has said, "More than 15,000 people arrive in the UK each day from virus-hit countries."

Incredibly, passengers are just given a leaflet at British airports and told to self-isolate for two-weeks if they feel ill after landing, and walking unchecked, onto the streets of Britain. Officials have admitted that there is no way of enforcing this.


Yet, the screening of passenger arrivals at UK airports, has been ruled out as 'ineffective' by Public Health England. While other countries have introduced screening for passengers at airports, have closed borders, and have restricted air travel, the British Foreign Office have said:


"There is no evidence that interventions like closing borders or travel bans would have any effect on the spread of the infection."


Health Secretary, Matt Hancock, has said that the flow of people coming into the country would not make a significant difference as the virus is already widespread and that screening of passengers at UK airports isn't happening because the number of people has "dropped very dramatically."


On 23 January, Hancock told the House of Commons that the Chief Medical Officer for England, Professor Christopher John MacRae Whitty, had revised the risk (of contracting Covid-19) to the UK population from low to very low and that;

"While there is an increased likelihood that cases may arise in this country, we are well prepared and well equipped to deal with them. The UK is one of the first countries to have developed a world leading test for the new coronavirus  and the NHS is ready to respond to any cases that emerge... the public can be assured that the whole of the UK is always prepared for these types of outbreaks and will remain vigilant and keep our response under constant review in the light of emerging scientific evidence."

Since the Health Secretary made this statement in January, saying that there was a very low risk to the UK population, and that the Health system was well prepared and well equipped to deal with it, tens of thousands of people in the UK have died of the virus, including many elderly people in care homes, and even Hancock, now admits, that the virus is 'widespread', throughout the UK.

Despite his assurances to the public that the government had everything under control, hospital's across England have reported a lack of personal protective equipment for front-line NHS staff - which is necessary to treat people with the virus, such as surgical gowns, face masks, visors - and a failure to test doctor's and nurses, to see if they're infected. There is also a shortage of respiratory equipment.

The Health Secretary's blase attitude towards this Covid-19 epidemic may well cost thousand of more British lives, and it is questionable, whether Boris Johnson and his government, have really abandoned their initial strategy of letting the coranavirus run its course, a kind of shock therapy, that is to be imposed on most of us.

VIP's, like Johnson, Hancock, and the Prince of Wales, have all had the virus and were tested very quickly and received first class medical treatment. For the rest of us, the hoi polloi, - who've been thrown under a bus, by Johnson, it is 'herd immunity'.

5 comments:

Tony Greenstein said...



I think this is called shutting the stable door after the virus has bolted.

Joan said...

Hi Derek,

You have been telling me about this story for months now ! Why didn’t the government see this as a threat for everyone coming in willy nilly without proper checks was a problem ! It was pure common sense wasn’t it ?

Another good article as usual stating the obvious!

Milton Pena said...

Hi Derek, hope you, family and friends are well during this difficult times.

I am still in Venezuela but I may return early June if restrictions to flights are lifted. I have followed the dogmatic, chaotic, directionless, confusing and criminally dangerous handling of the pandemic by the government. The lack of widespread testing and not counting the deaths in the community is premeditated.

Take extreme care my friend

Milton

Milton Pena said...

It’s Gerineglicide Derek, it has been happening for more than a decade and it has worsened by the Pandemic.

I read that the life span of the elderly have been shortened by TWELVE years as a result of becoming ill with this virus and dying of it.

Editor said...

Quote taken from the Financial Times, from Professor Gabriel Scally, of the Royal Society of Medicine.

"The UK is an outlier. It is very hard to understand why it (the British government), persists in having this open border policy. It is most peculiar."