UK: All Party Parliamentary Group on Coronavirus, March 2022 onwards

Andy

Senior Member (Voting rights)
Press release:

"MPs call on UK government to spend £100 million a year to research treatments for Long Covid

Report finds UK government has ‘not adequately funded’ Long Covid research and treatments

MPs and Peers say UK Government inaction means Long Covid will continue to impact UK productivity and essential services


For Immediate Release

The UK Government is today facing calls to ensure that the £50 million pledged for Long Covid research funding is doubled and matched each year to support the development of new treatments for Long Covid.


In a new report published by the All-Party Parliamentary Group (APPG) on Coronavirus today, cross-party MPs and Peers have recommended the UK Government double the £50 million pledged in the ‘Living with Covid’ plan each year to fund urgent new research into diagnostics and treatment, as well as providing financial support for key workers living with Long Covid.


The new report found that the UK Government’s Covid-19 policymaking has ‘continuously failed’ to take Long Covid into account, as well as failing to provide guidance, funding or support to employers and protecting children in schools. The report further found that the UK Government has not 'adequately funded’ research to identify treatments for Long Covid.


According to the latest ONS figures, an estimated 1.5 million people (2.4% of the population) are currently living with the condition in the UK, with the high number of resulting staff absences having a serious impact on the UK workforce, economy and vital public services.


Recent research conducted by the APPG estimated that 1.82 million days were lost to healthcare workers with Long Covid from March 2020 to September 2021 across 219 NHS trusts in England. Similarly, a survey conducted last month by the Chartered Institute of Personnel and Development found that a quarter of UK employers cited Long-Covid as one of the main causes of long-term sickness absence among their staff.


On Thursday, MPs will debate the government’s treatment of Long Covid and its impact on the UK workforce, which comes on the two year anniversary of the country’s first national lockdown.


Layla Moran MP, Chair of the All-Party Parliamentary Group on Coronavirus, said:

“Living with Covid inevitably means living with Long Covid too, so it is crucial that the Government rise to this moment and commit substantial annual funding for research until we have developed effective treatments for this often debilitating condition.

“Long Covid is already affecting 1.5 million people in the UK, and if the government fails to fully grasp the enormity of this challenge now, we could be hurtling towards a long-term health and workforce crisis in the future.”


Dr Dan Poulter MP, Vice-Chair of the All-Party Parliamentary Group on Coronavirus, said:

“Prematurely scrapping free testing will likely lead to rising infections, and as more people become unknowingly infected with the virus, more people will unfortunately develop Long Covid too.

“While we are currently facing other international challenges, this pandemic is sadly not over. That’s why establishing an annual fund for researching and developing treatments for Long Covid is both the economically smart and right thing to do, as in the long run, it will help us to avoid severe impacts on people’s health and the UK economy.”


David Nabarro, Special Envoy on Covid-19 for the World Health Organisation, said:

“What does it mean to live with COVID? The virus is among us. It is constantly evolving. It causes serious illness and may kill people who are susceptible. It may also lead to long COVID with the extra risks it brings.

“The present pattern is that case numbers start to climb every three months or so: this implies a need to detect surges quickly, prevent transmission, protect those most at risk and prepare for explosive outbreaks. It is a time to listen to the health workers: they know what is happening and where it may lead. They want the best for everyone.”

Report available from https://www.appgcoronavirus.uk/report-on-long-covid-2022
 
Long Covid: Impact on the Workforce
– in the House of Commons at 1:21 pm on 31st March 2022.

debate
Layla Moran Liberal Democrat Spokesperson (International Development), Liberal Democrat Spokesperson (Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs) 1:21 pm, 31st March 2022
I beg to move,

That this House
has considered the impact of long covid on the UK workforce.

I thank the Backbench Business Committee for allowing us to hold this updated debate on long covid. I also thank my co-sponsors, some of whom, I am sad to say, are at home ill with covid and very much wanted to be here today. Also the fact that the debate has moved weeks has not helped. For those watching at home, I have been contacted by several Members who are very sorry that they are not able to be here. I also want to put on record my thanks to the many hundreds of people who, over the years, have contacted the all-party group on coronavirus with their personal stories, many of which are very heart warming, but also moving and worrying because it is a debilitating condition. What I say to all of them is: “We hear you, you have not been forgotten and we will continue to fight for you.”

I want to recognise the actions that the Government have taken so far. I was pleased that, after the first debate we had on the issue in January 2021, the Government made some £18.5 million available for research into long covid, including treatment, and delivered even more funding in the summer, which is incredibly welcome. In that debate, I also welcomed the new dedicated long covid clinics and the publishing of guidance to medical professionals by the National Institute for Health and Care Excellence, the Scottish Intercollegiate Guidelines Network and the Royal College of General Practitioners. However, despite that welcome action, it has felt, over the past eight months, that long covid has totally dropped off the radar and, on this issue, there has been very little debate.

I thank the Under-Secretary of State for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy, Paul Scully for coming to the Chamber to answer this debate. I believe that it is the first time that the Department for Business Energy and Industrial Strategy has answered in the Chamber on this. I will focus my remarks on the effect that long covid has had on the workforce because our belief is that this is a looming crisis that we need to think ahead about and that it would be wrong for us just to focus on the medical side— there are broader implications here.

Although there are many understandable reasons why this matter may have dropped off the radar, including the cost of living crisis and the war in Ukraine, I argue that these things are very much linked. How are we going to have a strong and productive economy if large swathes of our workforce are struggling to do the jobs that they are meant to be doing? How can we help them to recover?

Over this past year, we have had more information and learned more about long covid, although it is worth saying that there is still no cure.

full debate
https://www.theyworkforyou.com/debates/?id=2022-03-31a.1038.1&s=Chronic+Fatigue+Syndrome#g1042.1
 
That horse has stormed out of the barn a loooooong time ago.

It's weird that people speak of things that have been happening for years as if they could be avoided in the future.

Jaime Seltzer put it marvelously today, something like you can't predict the future if you're still negotiating with the present. Hell, this is negotiating with the past, trying to avoid it happening. Sadly, those negotiations can somehow go on and on endlessly.
 
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