Friday, January 06, 2023

UK

EXCLUSIVE:
Missing health chief Steve Barclay spotted as pressure mounts over NHS crisis

Health Secretary Steve Barclay has been accused of being all-but absent during recent weeks, as NHS staff took historic industrial action and ambulances queue up outside hospitals


Health Secretary Steve Barclay has been under fire over the crisis gripping the NHS 
 Ian Vogler / Daily Mirror


Matthew Young
News Reporter
Lizzy Buchan
Deputy Online Political Editor
5 Jan 2023

Missing Health Secretary Steve Barclay was this morning pictured bright and early heading into the Department of Health.

He has been all-but absent during recent weeks, as NHS staff took historic industrial action and as ambulances queue up outside hospitals.


After PM Rishi Sunak yesterday promised action on NHS waiting lists, Mr Barclay was this morning whisked into the back entrance of the Department of Health in his chauffeur-driven, ministerial car shortly before 7am.

Both Mr Sunak and his health chief had been accused of going missing in action amid the crisis gripping the NHS over the festive period.

Mr Barclay finally broke cover on Tuesday and attempted to shift blame for the escalating pressures on the health service onto Covid, Strep A and flu.

Sunak ‘detached from reality’ as PM fails to offer hope for crumbling NHS in speech

Secretary of State for Health and Social Care Steve Barclay arrives for work at the Department of Health today (Image: Ian Vogler / Daily Mirror)

The Health Secretary admitted the disastrous situation in the health service was not acceptable.

But he said "a combination of very high rates of flu, persistent and high levels of COVID, continuing concerns particularly among many parents around Strep A" were at the root of the "massive pressures" faced by the NHS over Christmas.

He told broadcasters: "There's £500 million of investment this year going into tackling the pressure in terms of social care. So we're putting more funding in. We've got more clinicians, we've got more staff working in the NHS.


"Of course there's a range of factors that we need to do. There's been particular pressures over Christmas because we've had a surge in flu cases, Covid cases and also a lot of concern around Strep A."

But he failed to address the pleas from medics for more support, who warn that a decade of Tory cuts have left the NHS on the brink of collapse.

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