People in nursing homes would also be a priority, while schools could also be considered, Buckland said.
Solving delays with testing “is problem number one,” he added.
This occurs when the mayor of Greater Manchester, which has the highest infection rate in England, said time runs out to fix the verification system.
“I think we have two or three weeks to deal with these problems,” Mayor Andy Burnham told the BBC Newsnight programme. “If we don’t, the fear is that we will never take it as we head toward autumn and winter. “
The Bolton NHS Trust in Greater Manchester said tuesday that about a hundred more people had come in the event of a turn of destination and an emergency to request proof.
Mr. Burnham asked the government to work with the local government on where there is scarcity and where capacity deserves to be concentrated.
In statements to BBC Breakfast, Buckland said the government would “do everything necessary to make sure we have that capability” and that there was a “great determination within the government” in the formula and minimize disruptions.
He said testing centers would drop from 400 to 500 in the coming weeks and that the government would open laboratories “across the country. “
In addition to prioritizing testing for the NHS and social care, he said schools were also due to their “domino effect on the lives of parents and caregivers. “
Health Secretary Matt Hancock will announce who will be given priority in the coming days.
An increase in the call for coronavirus verification has led to local shortages, and many others reported disorders that ensure online bookings and are instructed to check sites many miles from home.
The giant Lighthouse Laboratories, run by the government to analyze swabs from all British countries, have been put into operation to treat them all.
Trial periods are limited because while there appear to be enough sites, there are bottlenecks in the labs for processing swabs, said Hugh Pym, editor-in-chief of the BBC.
A new lab will be up and running, but it may only take a few weeks, and until then, ministers say existing disorders are likely to continue.
On Wednesday, Buckland said 90% of the tests in person had returned in one day, but that “there are many more paintings to be made” for testing in the opposite house.
Hancock, speaking in the House of Commons on Tuesday, said the call for testing meant that the government “needed to re-prioritize and I didn’t shy away from prioritization decisions. “
Data on backlogs at the labs are not publicly available, yet Hancock said their capacity is “less than a day. ” This means that there can be up to 244,000 people.
The Ministry of Health said that about a quarter of the other people seeking to get tested did not want to do so, and only those with the corresponding symptoms are recorded.
Some closed their doors a few days after reopening, while others told annual categories and equipment, many of which form a bubble, to self-insulate for two weeks after cases were shown.
Union leaders in the school sector will be prioritized for testing.
Geoff Barton, general secretary of the Association of School and University Leaders (ASCL), said keeping schools open would be “unsustainable” if controllable problems were not resolved.
He told BBC Radio 4’s Today that school principals deserve whether a bubble stays at home if a student or instructor in an age organisation has covid-19 symptoms and simply doesn’t accept a check to be negative.
He said it would look like a “default” padlock, and it would be more frustrating because it’s unpredictable.
Dr Patrick Roach, general secretary of the NASUWT coaching union, said check delays meant that some academics and who were part of a bubble in a school were not isolated, even when there were several suspicious cases.
“This jeopardizes the fitness and protection of others in the local community,” Dr. Roach said in a letter to the minister of s.
Scott Vining’s daughter fell with a fever on Saturday. On Sunday, the rest of the family, who live near Dunstable in Bedfordshire, also developed symptoms.
“We’ve tried a lot of times,” he told the BBC about trying to make an e-book with a test. “We’re looking to do e-book tests for my daughter on Sunday, without success, and then at 8 a. m. on Monday for all of us. “
At one point, Scott presented a check in Warwickshire, 65 miles from his home, through the government’s website, but during the time he entered the main points of his family circle of four, the spaces had disappeared.
Maria Aziz, from west London, has been doing an electronic exam since Sunday, when her nine-year-old daughter, Mishal, complained of a sore throat. Between 4:00 a. m. and 4:00 a. m. on Monday, her daughter had evolved. Fever
She said she spent three days searching for and re booking an electronic exam. Her eldest daughter, Eimann, 14, also had to be taken out of school while seeking an electronic exam for her youngest daughter.
“I’m looking on the government’s online page and there was also a number on the online page to call – 119 – so I tried that too. At any time, no evidence was available. There were no home kits. There were no spaces. There were no grooves. It’s nothing. “
About 220,000 tests are processed every day, according to Government figures on Monday.
The government said its daily laboratory testing capacity in the UK exceeded 370,000 last week, adding antibody tests and tests used by scientists to estimate the extent of the virus.
The capacity (excluding the spread of antibodies and viruses) is approximately 245,000 depending on the day.
Government knowledge shows that laboratory capacity and capacity have increased, particularly since the onset of the pandemic. The purpose is to increase the capacity to 500,000 according to the day until the end of October.
However, there is a significant gap between the number of tests labs can perform (“capacity”) and the number of tests performed.
Analysis via Our World In Data, a study team at the University of Oxford, suggests that the UK now performs more testing than many other countries.
For example, the average of seven days until 10 September showed that the UK had conducted 2,8 tests consisting of 1,000 people, later than European countries adding France (2. 1) and Spain and Germany (1. 8).
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