Return of the mask! NHS hospitals ban visitors and bring back mask mandates due to wave of winter bugs
- Two NHS hospitals in England have banned visitors and brought back masks
- One Tory MP branded ‘locking away’ patients from loved ones ‘wrong and cruel’
- But hospital bosses say it is needed to protect patients and staff from viruses
Two NHS hospitals have banned most visitors and instructed patients to wear masks on its wards after being ravaged by a swath of winter bugs as well as Covid.
The move was announced jointly by NHS Northampton General Hospital and Kettering General Hospital Trusts.
But one Tory MP today called the trusts’ decision to ‘lock’ patients away from their loved ones ‘wrong and cruel’.
However, hospital bosses say the move is needed to protect vulnerable patients on the wards from a ‘significant increase’ in Covid, flu, RSV, and norovirus infections.
NHS Northampton General Hospital Trust and NHS Kettering General Hospital Trust have banned most visitors and imposed a mask mandates in scenes reminiscent of the Covid lockdown
The move attracted condemnation from Tory MP Alicia Kearns who said it was wrong and cruel to lock patients away from their loved ones
They added that they also need to keep staff from becoming infected by unwell visitors, which could lead to much-needed medics taking sick leave.
But Alicia Kearns, the Conservative MP for Rutland and Melton, slammed the decision.
Writing on Twitter she said: ‘This is very wrong and cruel.
‘Patients should not be locked away from their loved ones who advocate for their care, understand their needs and recognise signs that more support might be needed.’
Referencing how similar visitor bans were enacted during the Covid lockdown she added: ‘We must learn from mistakes, not repeat them.’
Announcing the new rules, which came into effect today, hospital bosses said all visiting to adult inpatient wards would be banned except for compassionate reasons.
Pregnant women and children in care would automatically apply for compassionate visiting, but other patients would be treated on a case-by-case basis.
The Trust said ‘virtual visiting’, for example using an iPad or tablet camera, would be increased so that patients could still stay in regular contact with their loved ones.
Any visitors who are allowed into the hospitals, and all patients, would be asked to wear masks to help reduce the spread of Covid and winter viruses like the flu.
Hospital bosses said 120 beds were now taken up Covid patients, 10-times the figure from September.
They also said another 70 beds were taken up by flu patients with the seasonal winter virus having inundated the NHS nationally over the past few weeks.
In a joint statement Northampton and Kettering General Hospital’s chief operating officers, Palmer Winstanley and Fay Gordon, said winter pressures said the decision to impose the new rules had not been made lightly.
They said: ‘The UK is now experiencing a significant spike in winter illnesses including COVID, flu, RSV and norovirus.
‘The current variants are very infectious, and we are seeing numbers rise in both hospitals with some patients being very unwell.
‘As a result, we are suspending visiting on adult inpatient wards and are asking all patients and visitors to wear masks when coming to the hospital.
‘It is not a decision we take lightly, and we hope people understand why we are reintroducing these measures for the safety of our patients’.
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