Health

Coronavirus PPE: Gowns ordered from Turkey fail to meet safety standards

Some 400,000 surgical gowns ordered from Turkey do not meet British safety standards, the UK government has said.

Up to half of the personal protective equipment (PPE) order was flown to the UK by the RAF last month, but has not been given to NHS workers and is now stuck in a warehouse.

It is not clear if the government will seek a refund from the suppliers.

The Department of Health said it was working "night and day to source PPE".

During the past few months as the UK has tackled the coronavirus pandemic, healthcare workers including doctors and nurses have complained of a lack of adequate kit such as gowns, masks and gloves.

PPE is essential for protecting front-line workers exposed to Covid-19, and without it workers are concerned they could catch or spread the virus.

Amid a row over the procurement of PPE in April, the government announced it had managed to source a large supply from Turkey.

After several delays, the RAF was deployed to Istanbul to fly it back to RAF Brize Norton on 22 April.

It is not known how much PPE was on board but the aircraft which was used can carry about 40 tons of cargo – about half of the consignment.

But now the government has confirmed that all of the surgical gowns that were delivered were unusable because they did not meet the required criteria.

The news was first reported by the Daily Telegraph.

Northern Ireland Secretary Brandon Lewis said it was "reassuring" that British experts were "ensuring the best quality of equipment".

He told BBC Breakfast that the government was "working through" a list of about 10,000 UK-based firms which have offered to make PPE, and had received 250,000 gowns from Northern Ireland.

Some NHS organisations have turned to local suppliers to get much-needed PPE. However, last week, the Department of Health called on hospitals to rely on the government's national procurement scheme to help ensure NHS Trusts did not "compete with each other for the same supplies".

The chief executive of the NHS Confederation, which represents health and care leaders, told the BBC that supplies were now "generally better" in hospitals but that care homes and GP surgeries still face "some difficulties".

But Niall Dickson said that government needs to ensure "the rhetoric is matched by the reality on the ground" and thRead More – Source

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