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  • 2020-05-22 (xsd:date)
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  • The government says 125,000 workers in care settings and 118,000 care home residents have been tested for Covid-19 (en)
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  • 125,000 care home staff have been tested for Covid-19. The Department for Health and Social Care has confirmed 125,000 staff in care settings have been tested since the start of the pandemic. 118,000 care home workers have been tested for Covid-19. This is not correct. 118,000 care home residents have been tested for Covid-19 since the start of the pandemic. New data has shown the figures from DHSC were not accurate. This story has now been archived. You can read an updated story here. Mr Speaker, I’m afraid he is simply in ignorance of the facts. Because the reality is that already 125,000 care home staff have been tested, 118,000—perhaps he didn’t know that Mr Speaker—118,000 care home workers have been tested and we are absolutely confident that we will be able to increase our testing not just in care homes but across the whole of the community. Boris Johnson, 20 May 2020 During Prime Minister’s Questions, Boris Johnson claimed that 125,000 care home staff have been tested and that 118,000 care home workers have been tested for Covid-19. This was a mistake. The Department of Health and Social Care told us that nearly 125,000 staff in care settings and over 118,000 care home residents have been tested. It also confirmed that these figures were since the start of the pandemic. Care settings as a term can include settings other than care homes. Therefore, the 125,000 workers in care settings who have been tested may not all have been working in care homes. We have asked DHSC to clarify this. The care home testing figures quoted by Mr Johnson do not appear to be published online or otherwise publicly available. DHSC has not responded to a query about where this information can be found. The Office for Statistics Regulation (OSR) has called for the government to ensure it publishes data that is used in public debate or to inform Parliament. Full Fact supports this call. The OSR said: Given the volume of data flowing around government and the pace at which things are changing, there are inevitably instances when unpublished figures are being quoted in the public domain. It is right that ministers have access to up to date information. It is also right that this information is shared with the media and the public, but it remains important this is done in a way that promotes transparency and clarity. Otherwise it has the potential to cause confusion and undermine confidence in the statistics and organisations that produce them. Update 23 July 2020 This story has been archived following the release of new data. We got in touch to request a correction regarding a claim made by Boris Johnson in Parliament. They did not respond. Will you add your name for better standards in public debate? Yes, I’ll join the fight for good information (en)
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