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UK was ‘hugely underprepared for Covid due to years of austerity’

A report from the Federation of Trade Unions has highlighted the issues (Picture: Getty/PA)
A report from the Federation of Trade Unions has highlighted the issues (Picture: Getty/PA)

The UK was hugely unprepared for the pandemic because of years of austerity, according to a new report.

The TUC said funding cuts reduced the capacity to respond to the crisis, which left health and social care ‘dangerously understaffed.’

Safe staffing levels in health and social care were undermined by multiple years of pay caps and pay freezes, which impeded recruitment and increased staff turnover, the report said.

Public services capacity was damaged by ‘steep cuts’ to almost every part of the public sector, it added.

In 2020 when the coronavirus pandemic began, spending per capita was lower than in 2010 in social care, transport, housing, childcare, schools, higher education, police, fire services, and environmental protection, according to the TUC, the federation of trade unions.

It claimed this limited the ability of public services to contribute effectively to civil contingencies and to continue essential activities effectively, such as children’s education.

The report added that during the pandemic, when workplace risks multiplied, workplace inspections and enforcement notices fell to an all-time low.

CAMBRIDGE, UNITED KINGDOM - MAY 05: Clinical staff wear Personal Protective Equipment (PPE) as they care for a patient at the Intensive Care unit at Royal Papworth Hospital on May 5, 2020 in Cambridge, England. NHS staff wear an enhanced level of PPE in higher risk areas such as critical care to minimise the spread of infection between staff and patients. Countries around the world are taking increased measures to stem the widespread of the SARS-CoV-2 coronavirus which causes the Covid-19 disease. (Photo by Neil Hall - Pool/Getty Images)
Funding cuts left health and social care ‘dangerously understaffed'(Picture: Getty)
A sign outside a shop asks customers to social distance on Oxford Street in central London on June 7, 2021. - The Delta variant of the coronavirus, first discovered in India, is estimated to be 40 percent more transmissible than the Alpha variant that caused the last wave of infections in the UK, Britain's health minister said Sunday. (Photo by Niklas HALLE'N / AFP) (Photo by NIKLAS HALLE'N/AFP via Getty Images)
‘Austerity cost the nation dearly’ during the Covid-19 pandemic it is claimed (Picture: AFP)

Funding for the Health and Safety Executive was 43% lower in 2021/22 than in 2009/10 in real terms, with staff numbers cut, it claimed.

TUC general secretary Paul Nowak said: ‘To learn lessons and save future lives, we must take an unflinching look at the choices made by our leaders in the years before the pandemic.

‘In the NHS and social care, funding cuts put staff levels in the danger zone.

‘Cuts to social security pushed many more people below the poverty line, leaving them more vulnerable to infection, and cuts to health and safety left workers exposed to rogue employers who cut corners and put their lives at risk.

LONDON, UNITED KINGDOM - APRIL 10: NHS workers in PPE take a patient with an unknown condition from an ambulance at St Thomas' Hospital on April 10, 2020 in London, England. Public Easter events have been cancelled across the country, with the government urging the public to respect lockdown measures by celebrating the holiday in their homes. Over 1.5 million people across the world have been infected with the COVID-19 coronavirus, with over 7,000 fatalities recorded in the United Kingdom. (Photo by Justin Setterfield/Getty Images)
Millions of people died during the pandemic as Covid-19 spread across the world (Picture: Getty)

‘Austerity cost the nation dearly. It left us hugely unprepared for the pandemic, and it left far too many workers unprotected. The consequences were painful and tragic.

‘The inquiry is our chance to learn the lessons – and to understand why we have to rebuild our public services so that they are strong enough to protect us in a future crisis.’

The report was published ahead of a joint press conference with the Covid-19 Bereaved Families for Justice group on Monday about the lessons they believe must be learned through the UK Covid-19 Inquiry

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