Hammersmith & FulhamKensington & ChelseaNewsWestminster

One in ten people discharged from hospital to care homes during pandemic height had tested positive

By Julia Gregory, Local Democracy Reporter

More than one in 10 inpatients discharged from west London hospitals to care homes at the height of the coronavirus pandemic had tested positive for the disease, it has been revealed.

Overall Imperial College NHS Trust discharged 185 patients into care homes between March 1 and April 15 – at the peak time for fatalities from the virus.

And just 57 were tested – with 22 getting a positive diagnosis and 34 tested negative, according to hospital data.

This followed government guidance for testing at the time. It said only those people who were in contact with someone who tested positive for the illness should get a test.

At Charing Cross Hospital, just 27 – or one third – of those discharged to care homes got tested for the virus. Another 50 did not get tested at all. Just nine patients tested positive for coronavirus.

And at St Mary’s Hospital in Paddington, 12 patients were diagnosed with the virus out of the 27 who got tests before they were discharged. Another 46 people were not tested.

There was one positive result out of three tests. A further 26 people were not tested before they went to care homes.

And there were no tests among patients at the Western Eye Hospital and Queen Charlotte’s and Chelsea Hospital, who went to care homes during the same period.

The data released after a Freedom of Information request does not disclose where the care homes are.

According to government figures, 20,000 care home residents in England and Wales died from coronavirus.

An Imperial spokesman said: “During this period at the beginning of the pandemic, in line with national guidance, we were generally testing only those inpatients who had had a contact with a confirmed case of Covid-19.

Patients who tested positive would have been expected to be kept isolated for at least seven days post symptoms.

Ben Coleman, Hammersmith and Fulham’s cabinet member for health and adult social care, said he was not surprised by the figures.

He said the data released under Freedom of Information rules “starkly shows why we shut care homes in Hammersmith and Fulham at the end of March as the Government was insisting hospitals should discharge patients back into care homes without testing them first. We were concerned that was endangering people’s lives.”


Subscribe to Blog via Email

Enter your email address to subscribe to this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.


Everyone at the South London Press thanks you for your continued support.

Former Housing Secretary Robert Jenrick has encouraged everyone in the country who can afford to do so to buy a newspaper, and told the Downing Street press briefing:

“A FREE COUNTRY NEEDS A FREE PRESS, AND THE NEWSPAPERS OF OUR COUNTRY ARE UNDER SIGNIFICANT FINANCIAL PRESSURE”

If you can afford to do so, we would be so grateful if you can make a donation which will allow us to continue to bring stories to you, both in print and online. Or please make cheques payable to “MSI Media Limited” and send by post to South London Press, Unit 112, 160 Bromley Road, Catford, London SE6 2NZ

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *


The reCAPTCHA verification period has expired. Please reload the page.