Workers “should not put their lives at risk” because they haven’t got the right protective equipment, Labour has said.
It comes as the death toll among frontline health and care workers surpassed 100, according to figures from the PA news agency.
And the country fell silent for one minute to remember key workers who have died during the coronavirus pandemic.
Sir Keir Starmer said “too many” frontline workers have died during the fight against coronavirus “and we owe them a huge debt”.
In a video message, the Labour leader said: “Nobody should put their lives at risk because they haven’t got the right protective equipment. We owe it to them to make sure that we’ve got the right equipment, in the right place at the right time, and we will continue to press on that.”
Meanwhile, Matt Hancock was urged to issue a public apology over PPE shortages by the son of a doctor who died after warning the Government about a lack of PPE.
Intisar Chowdhury, the son of Dr Abdul Mabud Chowdhury, who died earlier this month after being diagnosed with Covid-19, challenged the Health Secretary during a live phone in on LBC.
Five days before he was admitted to hospital, Dr Chowdhury, 53, wrote a Facebook post asking Prime Minister Boris Johnson to urgently provide every NHS worker with PPE.
“We took very, very seriously what your father said and we’ve been working around the clock to ensure that there’s enough protective equipment and in the case of anybody who works in the NHS or in social care and has died from coronavirus we look into it in each case to find out the reasons where they might have caught it and what lessons we can learn,” Mr Hancock said.
Mr Hancock said the Government has distributed more than a billion items of PPE.
He said: “People need to have the PPE according to the guidelines, the guidelines do say that in some cases PPE can safely be reused and that’s a good thing because PPE is in global short supply.”
He was also quizzed about the findings of an unpublished 2016 pandemic drill, Exercise Cygnus.
He said: “It was before I was Health Secretary but I asked my officials to go back when this first came up in the press a few weeks ago and check that everything that was recommended was done and that’s the assurance I got, everything that was appropriate to do was done, that’s what I was told.”
He added: “The preparations that we had in this country were amongst the most extensive in the world but of course you can’t prepare for a virus that is itself completely new by its nature.”
He continued: “I’m spending all of my time day and night working out how we best respond, there will be a time when people can go back and ask questions about what happened in 2016, before I was Health Secretary, but frankly what matters is what you do with what you’ve got now.”
Mr Hancock was asked by host Nick Ferrari whether he accepted that mistakes were made in the provision of PPE.
He replied: “Well, there are things that we’ve changed as we’ve gone through, both because we’ve learnt more things about the virus, also because things didn’t work out as we expected.”
Meanwhile, a fashion brand has been commissioned to make reusable hospital gowns for its local NHS hospital.
David Nieper, a fashion firm in Derbyshire, has designed a ‘parachute-style’ surgical gown for frontline NHS staff.
Working with University Hospitals of Derby and Burton NHS Foundation Trust, a design team from the firm has created a prototype which can be laundered by the hospital then safely re-used 100 times by doctors and nurses on Covid-19 wards, it said.
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