Brexit preparations took staff away from Covid-19 pandemic planning, Northern Ireland’s chief medical officer has said.
Sir Michael McBride said the work of the Department of Health was also impacted by the lack of a Stormont Executive between 2017 and 2020.
His comments came at the UK Covid inquiry which is examining how prepared the nation was ahead of the pandemic striking in early 2020. He has been Northern Ireland’s chief medical officer since 2006.
Northern Ireland was without devolved government from 2017 following the resignation of then-deputy first minister Martin McGuinness. It was not restored until the New Decade, New Approach deal was struck in January 2020, which put ministers in posts just before Covid-19 hit the region.
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Dr McBride described to the inquiry the structures that were in place for pandemic planning. The Northern Ireland Pandemic Flu Oversight Group was set up in 2018 to develop surge plans in relation to secondary care and social care, following the UK’s Exercise Cygnus.
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As part of this, a task and finish group was asked in 2018 to review and update the health and social care influenza pandemic surge guidance. But it was unable to finish its work when staff were diverted for Brexit planning.
“Resources were diverted to EU-exit planning,” he told the inquiry. “The work was incidentally picked up again in January of 2020, but of course then events overtook us and, in the end, further work was carried out in February and we did have surge plans in place for the first wave of the pandemic.”
A lack of a minister for health between 2017 and 2020 also hampered the department’s work, Dr McBride said, including the implementation of the Bengoa Report which was designed to transform the health service.
“I think there is absolutely no doubt that the absence of ministers did have a significant impact on our ability to develop new policy,” he said. “It has been a very challenging resourcing situation over the last decade, particularly so in Northern Ireland over the last five years, compounded by a reliance on annual budgets – so we were making decisions in terms of trying to live within budget allocations.
“We had to make savings, and obviously there is limited opportunity to make savings in health, particularly where you have got inflationary pressures of 6 per cent per year because of technology and an ageing population and their needs.
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“The resulting position was that we were having to make decisions which were not necessarily decisions that should be made but decisions that had to be made.”
Dr McBride’s appearance came after former minister for health Robin Swann gave evidence to the inquiry last week. Mr Swann contended that years of neglect of the health service had hindered its ability to respond to the pandemic, and years of stop-start government and short-term budgets had prevented reform.
Former first minister Arlene Foster is set to appear on Tuesday, and former deputy first minister and former minister for health Michelle O’Neill is to attend on Wednesday. Richard Pengelly, a former permanent secretary at the Department of Health, is also due to give evidence this week. – PA