Slow coronavirus response cost lives, says ex-adviser David King


Slow response to coronavirus has cost lives, says government’s former science adviser David King as he blames austerity measures for lack of pandemic preparations

  • Sir David King says the UK government’s slow response to coronavirus cost lives
  • Ex-chief science adviser says it was obvious disease would spread from China 
  • Sir David said coalition’s austerity measures meant less emergency planning 
  • Learn more about how to help people impacted by COVID

Professor Sir David King (pictured in 2014) said it took too long for the authorities to act when the disease began to spread in China

The slow response to coronavirus has cost lives, the government’s former chief scientific adviser said today. 

Professor Sir David King said it took too long for the authorities to act when the disease began to spread in China – even though experts had believed for years that such an outbreak would reach ‘everywhere’.

Sir David, who left his post in 2007, also blamed austerity for the lack of planning to deal with the pandemic. 

The comments, in an interview with LBC radio, are a clear swipe at ministers and his successor Sir Patrick Vallance.

Downing Street has insisted it has been following the scientific advice at all times during the response to the crisis.  

Sir David said: ‘I’m very saddened by the predicament we’re in. Why we didn’t respond so much sooner once this epidemic broke out in China, I simply don’t know.

‘And I say this because in 2006, we published a report on actions needed to deal with a pandemic, and in that report, we showed that if an outbreak occurred of any new virus of this kind anywhere in the world, within three months, due to air travel, it would be everywhere in the world.

‘That of course is what has happened and it seems like we were unprepared and we didn’t take action.

‘We didn’t manage this until too late and every day’s delay has resulted in further deaths in the United Kingdom.’

Sir David, who was chief scientific adviser from 2000 to 2007, also said he believes that austerity policies under the Tory-Liberal Democrat coalition have affected the response to Covid-19.

‘It goes right back to 2010 when the Government came in with a very clear policy to reduce public spending across the board, including the National Health Service,’ he said.

‘I’m afraid these austerity measures did lead to the cutting back on the risk management programmes.

‘Clearly this also managed to cause problems with flooding across the UK. We were much better prepared for better spending with the Environment Agency on that and equally unprepared for pandemics.

‘For me, this is very upsetting because we had set this preparation process in place back in 2006.’

Asked if austerity had cost lives, he said: ‘Absolutely, that is what I’m saying.’

On what the Government needs to do next, Sir David said: ‘Until we get testing done on a very much wider scale, we’re not going to begin to manage this.’ 

The comments, in an interview with LBC radio, are a clear swipe at ministers and his successor Sir Patrick Vallance (pictured in Downing Street this week)

The comments, in an interview with LBC radio, are a clear swipe at ministers and his successor Sir Patrick Vallance (pictured in Downing Street this week)