NHS Staff Faced PPE Shortages During Covid Pandemic
The UK Covid inquiry has revealed major failures in the country’s personal protective equipment (PPE) planning during the pandemic. The report found that NHS staff and patients faced risks because hospitals did not have enough suitable protective equipment when Covid 19 spread.
The inquiry chair, Baroness Hallett, said the government wasted around £9.9bn on PPE purchases. This amount represented nearly two thirds of the £14.9bn spent by the UK and devolved governments on masks, gowns and gloves.
The report said the UK entered the pandemic with a weak emergency PPE stockpile. Officials were not prepared for the worldwide competition to buy protective equipment as demand increased rapidly.
Poor Planning Created PPE Supply Problems
The inquiry highlighted serious problems with the country’s PPE preparation before Covid 19 reached its peak. The emergency stockpile was designed to last around 15 weeks, but supplies started running low by the end of March 2020 as hospitals needed much more equipment.
Only one third of England’s stored masks were suitable for use, while Scotland had no high grade respiratory masks available for hospital workers.
The inquiry also criticised the decision to make care homes, GP surgeries and pharmacies arrange their own PPE supplies. Investigators described this approach as a major planning failure that left many healthcare workers struggling to access protection.
Billions Lost Through Unused PPE and Equipment
The investigation found that the government had to write off £9.9bn worth of PPE because products were either unused, unsuitable or expired. Another £157m was lost on healthcare equipment that was never used.
The emergency ventilator programme also created additional costs. The government spent £143m on designs and projects that never reached production.
Across the UK, similar losses occurred. Scotland wrote off around £8m of healthcare equipment, including PPE and testing supplies. Wales spent £18m on unused PPE, while Northern Ireland faced the risk of £43m worth of protective equipment expiring before use.
Inquiry Criticises PPE Procurement System
The report examined the controversial “VIP lane” system, which gave priority to PPE offers from people with political connections. Baroness Hallett called the policy misguided because it damaged public trust.
However, the inquiry found no evidence that ministers or officials committed corruption or deliberately favoured suppliers when awarding contracts.
The report stated that buying extra PPE during a global health crisis was understandable, but better planning could have reduced waste and saved public money.
Lessons From The Pandemic Response
The Covid inquiry concluded that stronger preparation could have created a faster, fairer and cheaper PPE purchasing system.
The findings highlight the importance of maintaining emergency supplies, improving healthcare planning and creating better systems for future health crises.
