Ministers face criticism over lack of equipment for NHS staff as Parliament returns after Easter break

Ministers will today face criticism over a failure to ensure NHS staff treating coronavirus patients have vital protective equipment as Parliament returns following an extended Easter break.

The Government has insisted "every possible option" is being pursued to secure additional kit but said with unprecedented worldwide demand, the situation was "very challenging".

It comes as the first of three RAF flights finally left on Monday for Turkey to begin collecting a consignment of personal protective equipment (PPE) including 400,000 surgical gowns.

Some 140,000 gowns had arrived from Burma, but with the NHS using 150,000 a day, the demand on resources remains intense.

Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab walks from the Foreign Office to 10 Downing Street to attend the Government's daily Covid-19 briefing on Monday
AFP via Getty Images

With fears staff in hospitals and care homes are risking their lives, the Trades Union Congress (TUC) called for an independent inquiry into the Government's handling of the issue to be mounted before the end of the year.

TUC general secretary Frances O'Grady said: "Every day frontline workers are being forced to risk their lives because they don't have the proper protective equipment.

"This is a grotesque failure of planning and preparedness. It must never be allowed to happen again. Our NHS, social care and key workers deserve better."

In other developments:

- Shadow Cabinet Office minister Rachel Reeves accused the Government of ignoring offers from British manufacturers to fill the gap.

- Chris Hopson, chief executive of NHS Providers, which represents hospitals and NHS trusts in England, warned the NHS's supply of face masks could be jeopardised if the Government begins advising the public to wear them, saying "clear evidence" would be needed before advice was changed.

- The Scientific Advisory Group for Emergencies, Sage, which advises the Government, will reportedly consider the evidence at a meeting on Tuesday.

- Manjeet Riyat, the first Sikh to work as an A&E consultant in the UK, was named among the latest healthcare workers to die after contracting Covid-19.

The warnings over PPE came as the latest official figures showed a total of 16,509 patients had died in hospital after testing positive for coronavirus in the UK as of 5pm on Sunday, up by 449 on the previous day.

At the daily No 10 press conference on Monday, Chancellor Rishi Sunak insisted the Government was improving its sourcing of PPE both internationally and domestically.

However the medical director of Public Health England, Professor Yvonne Doyle, indicated staff could refuse to work if they believed they were not properly protected.

"Certainly people have to make their decisions based on whether they are in a risky situation or not," she said.

"It is very difficult to legislate for all of that from a distance here. But the guidance is very clear on what is safe and not safe to do."

Parliament resumes on Tuesday following an extended Easter break due to the pandemic.

MPs are expected to approve plans for new "virtual" sittings enabling them to question ministers thorough video links.

Under the "hybrid" arrangements up to 50 MPs may still be present in the chamber in person although they are being urged to stay away.

Meanwhile, former chancellor Philip Hammond said the Government must start setting out how it will restart the economy once it is able to begin easing the lockdown restrictions.

Listen to The Leader: Coronavirus Daily podcast

Speaking to the Chatham House foreign affairs think tank, he said while it was "primarily a health crisis" people should not be "intimidated into silence on the economic implications and consequences".

"The Government now needs visibly to be looking two or three moves ahead - to be turning its attention to engagement with the business community about the recovery phase," he said.

"This is a £2 trillion economy - you can't spin it up overnight from nothing and we owe it to all our citizens to make sure that when the green light is signalled, businesses can respond very quickly and that means being prepared."

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