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Coronavirus: Government ditches cap on NHS staff being tested for coronavirus

The health secretary acts to utilise the spare testing capacity by removing a limit on the number of NHS staff who can be tested.

A sign points the way to a NHS 111 Coronavirus Pod at The Royal London Hospital in London on March 23, 2020. - Prime Minister Boris Johnson warned on Sunday he may impose tougher controls on the British public as packed parks, markets and cafes at the weekend showed thousands of people defying government warnings about social distancing. The PM gave notice of potential tougher action as the latest health department figures revealed that 281 people had now died from COVID-19 in the UK, an increas
Image: NHS staff began being tested for coronavirus at the weekend
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Hospitals have been told to test as many staff as possible for coronavirus after Health Secretary Matt Hancock removed a cap on the number of NHS workers who can be assessed each day.

The UK can now test more than 12,000 people per day for COVID-19, with that capacity expected to soon rise to 15,000 tests per day.

The government aims to increase this further to 25,000 tests per day by the middle of this month.

However, concerns have been raised about the country's current level of testing, following comparisons with nations such as Germany, which is estimated to now be conducting as many as 500,000 tests per week.

And questions have been asked about why the UK isn't even using its full testing capacity at laboratories.

Only 8,630 people were tested for coronavirus on Monday, despite the UK having the ability to test many more.

The health secretary announces he has coronavirus
Image: Health Secretary Matt Hancock has removed a cap on testing

Mr Hancock has now acted to utilise the spare testing capacity by removing a limit on the number of NHS staff who can be tested.

More on Covid-19

Previously, 85% of UK testing was allocated for patients with COVID-19 symptoms, with the remaining 15% kept for hospital staff.

Due to the extra testing capacity now available, the health secretary has now scrapped this limit and ordered the NHS to test as many staff as possible, as well as patients.

Any spare testing capacity will now be used to test NHS staff and their families in order to keep hospital workers on the frontline in the battle against coronavirus.

Sky News understands this will now mean thousands of NHS staff will be able to get tested every day.

More than 900 NHS staff were tested over the weekend as hospital workers began to be assessed for COVID-19.

Downing Street said on Wednesday that more than 2,000 NHS staff have now been tested.

Coronavirus UK tracker: How many cases are in your area – updated daily
Coronavirus UK tracker: How many cases are in your area � updated daily

Niall Dickson, the chief executive of the NHS Confederation, said staffing levels are "probably still the biggest challenge" facing hospitals.

He explained the importance of testing in order to allow NHS staff, who might be self-isolating for fear of having caught coronavirus, to get back to work.

"One of the reasons why we have such a lot of debate about testing is a worry that there are too many staff - who may not be displaying very acute symptoms or may have had symptoms and gone through it - but are living with someone who may or may not have the virus," he told Sky News' Kay Burley@Breakfast show.

"That's why testing of staff and ramping up that testing of staff - and indeed people in their households - is so important to try and get these people onto the frontline."

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Chris Hopson - chief executive of NHS Providers, which represents all NHS trusts - suggested the start of testing of hospital staff at the weekend revealed the vast majority who are self-isolating could return to work.

"We did start testing staff over the weekend and a very intriguing piece of data emerged from those very early tests," he told BBC Newsnight.

"It's a very, very small sample size but what was interesting was, of the members of staff who have been self-isolating for 14 days because they had a family member who potentially had coronavirus symptoms, only 15% of them were positive."

Mr Hopson suggested, if those results were replicated in the coming days, then 85% of the staff who are self-isolating can go back to work.