Ministers claim they have now delivered TWO BILLION bits of PPE to the NHS and social care workers

The British Government has now delivered more than two billion pieces of personal protective equipment (PPE) to NHS staff and care workers, it claimed today.

Department of Health officials announced the milestone and hailed it a ‘herculean cross-government effort’, adding that it had ordered another 28billion items of PPE.

The Government was scorned by NHS staff and care workers throughout the height of the crisis for not providing enough equipment for people to work safely.

Doctors and nurses regularly reported feeling unsafe at work because they had to reuse masks and gloves, while care homes were left with ‘paltry’ supplies.

Despite repeated promises of action from the Government, health and care workers were still complaining about PPE shortages in May.

Now that the first wave of Britain’s outbreak appears to be coming to a close – 119 deaths are being announced each day, on average, down from over 900 at the peak of the crisis – the Department of Health hailed its ‘impressive milestone’.

It said the Government has delivered 341million face masks, 313million aprons, four million gowns and 1.1billion gloves to frontline workers.

The Government came under fire earlier in the year for counting gloves individually to make the numbers seem bigger – the Department of Health has not yet responded to request for clarification from MailOnline about how gloves were counted here.

Personal protective equipment is now mandatory for doctors and nurses to prevent the coronavirus from spreading in surgeries and hospitals (Pictured: A nurse at a clinic in Grimsby wears PPE while taking blood from a patient)

Health Secretary Matt Hancock said today: ‘Coronavirus has placed unprecedented global demands on PPE supply chains. 

‘To tackle this we set a national challenge calling on companies to channel their manufacturing power into manufacturing much-needed PPE, and brought in Lord Deighton who has truly delivered once more for his country.

‘Two billion items of PPE have now been delivered to the frontline, and a further 28 billion items sourced, that will protect frontline workers well into the future.

‘It is thanks to the herculean effort from UK industry, the NHS and departmental teams, our diplomatic teams abroad, and the armed forces that we have now hit this impressive milestone.’

Officials said they had ordered almost 28billion items from UK-based suppliers, with up to 20 per cent of all supplies being made in Britain.

They said the supply chain was only built to accommodate 226 NHS trusts but now supplied PPE to 58,000 different locations.

Hospital and care home staff have been calling for better PPE supplies throughout the outbreak and dozens of them have even died after catching Covid-19 at work.

 The British Medical Association, just two weeks ago on June 11, said it would ‘continue to press the government’ on the issue because staff were still reporting shortages.

It advised its members that they cannot be forced to do risky work if hospitals don’t give them enough protective equipment.

A statement on the BMA website said: ‘There are limits to the risks you can be expected to expose yourself to. 

‘You are under no obligation to provide high-risk services without appropriate safety and protection. You can refuse to treat patients if your PPE is inadequate, you are at high risk of infection and there is no other way of delivering the care.’

A desperate plea from a nurse working in Doncaster in April struck a chord when a medic at her hospital, Dr Medhat Atalla, 62, died of coronavirus.

The unnamed nurse said in a Facebook post: ‘Please, please, please if anybody knows of any companies that could spare us some PPE then please we are begging them to help. 

‘We are all extremely anxious about the lack of equipment we need to keep ourselves, our families, colleagues and patients safe.’ 

Care home bosses have also been furious about a lack of PPE for their staff. More than 14,000 residents have now died with Covid-19 and the homes are considered hotspots for the disease.

In April insiders said they were receiving only ‘paltry’ and ‘haphazard’ deliveries of essential items such as masks, gloves and aprons, which are mandatory for all healthcare workers. 

Bosses were still furious in May when they said they continued to struggle to get enough protective equipment for their staff.

The union Unison revealed at the start of last month that it had revealed almost 3,600 reports about PPE shortages from its members.

Colin Angel, policy director for the UK Homecare Association (UKHCA), said sourcing equipment for workers is a main concern for care providers. 

He told BBC Breakfast on May 5: ‘I think every homecare provider in the country is really struggling to get a sure supply of PPE, and having enough to be confident that they can continue providing care services across, sometimes even days, if not just a few weeks.

‘And it’s a real stress. I have a provider who was telling me he was spending 90 per cent of his time trying to phone round and get PPE delivered.

‘That means he’s looking for PPE rather than being able to run the rest of his service.

‘That’s a huge problem, and the levels of stress it’s creating both for providers delivering care and their frontline care workers is really high.’