Jonathan Edwards
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
But from reading the figures, it seems that hospitals haven’t been full.
I think you may have been misled. Certainly in the UK hospitals were overfull before the pandemic. During it both patients and staff were getting infected with Covid and dying on a regular basis. I don't think health services have in any way over-reacted. I get a direct account from my niece, who works as a GP in A and E and caught Covid pretty badly.
There is absolutely no way that it would be safe for cancer patients to be treated at the moment. It would be insane to go to a hospital.
In fact I am a cancer patient myself. I had an appointment booked for next week, which I have cancelled in order to avoid the risk of getting infected (I am over 70). So in a sense I have put myself in the same situation as your relative of my own volition because I know the risks.
Things are a dreadful mess and people are not getting treatment as they should but I would be extremely surprised if the Covid pandemic had changed any policies in the long term. That does not make sense. Everything is on hold temporarily but I don't think anybody is going to discharge people because of Covid. It is easy to get a garbled message. And it may also be the people will get forgotten not by policy but slip up - but that had been happening for years already. About ten years ago the urology department at UCL admitted that a third of its cancer follow up patients had just got lost in the system.
Yes, the situation is terrible, but it has nothing to do with over-reacting.