Lateral flow Covid tests will be free until the end of August, health boss reveals
Free asymptomatic Covid tests may be scrapped at the end of August and Brits may have to PAY for lateral flow kits from then
- Brits are entitled to two free lateral flow tests per week on Government scheme
- Dr Jenny Harries says ‘decisions will be made’ on whether to extend it in August
- Shadow Health Secretary Jonathan Ashworth slammed move to charge for tests
Free asymptomatic Covid testing may be scrapped by the end of August, meaning Britons could be forced to pay for their own kits.
One of the Government’s top health officials today told MPs ‘decisions will be made’ on whether to extend the public swabbing blitz past next month.
Ditching the near-£3billion scheme would mark a significant U-turn after the Government launched it with much fanfare just three months ago.
All adults in the UK are currently entitled to pick up two free testing kits a week, which can be collected from pharmacies or ordered online.
They are intended to be used by people when they do not show symptoms of Covid to pick up the estimated one in five cases that are asymptomatic and ensure people isolate.
But the kits have derided criticism for their inaccuracy, especially when self-administered. Department of Health data showed they produced more false than true positives in the first two weeks of mass testing at schools.
The Department of Health said anyone in England will be able to pick up a test until the end of August ‘at least’ but did not confirm if a decision to scrap the scheme had been made.
It said: ‘Further details on the provision of free rapid LFD testing will be set out in due course.’
Labour’s shadow health secretary Jonathan Ashworth slammed the proposal to introduce charges for tests at the same time cases are surging in the country.
Free asymptomatic Covid testing may be scrapped by the end of August, health bosses revealed today
Dr Jenny Harries, chief executive of the Health Security Agency, told MPs ‘decisions will be made’ on whether to extend the two free lateral flow tests per week scheme past next month
Asked about whether the scheme will be extended past the end of August at the Public Accounts Committee today, Dr Jenny Harries, chief executive of the Health Security Agency, refused to rule out it being scrapped.
She said: ‘[We are] looking at whether it is an effective and essential public health intervention going forward. Nobody has discussed charging.’
Permanent Secretary at the Department of Health and Social Care Sir Chris Wormald added: ‘Let’s be absolutely clear on this point.
‘What we are doing is looking at the public health case for use going forward.’
Dr Harries confirmed free mass testing would continue as before in schools past August.
Following reports the scheme could be scrapped as early as the end of July, Mr Ashworth claimed the move to introduce charges ‘beggars belief’.
He said: ‘Sajid Javid’s policy of allowing infections to rise as high as 100,000 a day will see hundreds of thousands forced into self quarantine.
‘In that context ascend to lateral flow tests will be vital. It beggars belief that the health Secretary is introducing charging for testing.’
Mr Ashworth also told MailOnline: ‘And it means yet again those who are poorer are left to bear the brunt of the crisis. We should be making it easier to access testing not harder.’
Rapid tests showed more false than true positives in the first two weeks of mass testing at schools, forcing children to stay at home unnecessarily
The scheme — a watered down version of No10’s ambitious ‘Operation Moonshot’ 10million-tests-a-day project — was launched on April 9.
Former Health Secretary Matt Hancock said at the time it would be ‘one of our most effective weapons in tackling this virus’.
Previously, the tests were only used routinely in schools, hospitals and care homes.
Ministers spent £2.8billion on hundreds of millions of the kits, which give a result in 30 minutes. They have been shown to miss infectious people up to 40 per cent of the time.
Numerous studies have shown the kits are far less accurate when self-administered – which is how they’re used across the UK.
Leaked Department of Health emails in April revealed senior officials feared they only pick up on 10 per cent of infections when done this way.
And Department of Health data showed six out of 10 positive rapid test results between March 4 and March 17 at schools turned out to be wrong when followed up by gold-standard PCR tests.
Out of 1,050 positive results, 605 were wrong, the official numbers showed — 58 per cent — meaning hundreds of children were kept out of classrooms for no reason.