7./ I'm a big supporter of WHO, but it didn't cover itself with glory in January. As @LawDavF has pointed out in a thread in March the idea the UK govt wasn't seriously monitoring COVID-19 before then is ridiculous. NERVTAG met regularly from 13th Jan on. https://twitter.com/LawDavF/status/1243607117552115712?s=20
8./ The article makes a great deal of departments not implementing their pandemic plans all the way through February. But pandemic plans are triggered by WHO announcing a pandemic. WHO did that on March 11th
days after the "38 days" which the ST claims the UK government wasted.
9./ If you think that was a mistake speak to WHO's Chief, Tedros Ghebreyesus who said on Feb 26th: “Using the word pandemic carelessly has no tangible benefit,” The term also “does have significant risk. It can boost unjustified fears and stigma".
11./ He said doctors were busily trying to track down 2000 people who had flown into the UK from Wuhan in the last week and that teams would check the health of everyone arriving from China. At that stage there were no recorded cases in Britain tho 4 cases in France.
12./ The ST makes great play of how pandemic preparedness had supposedly diminished. Perhaps. But it fails to point out that independent expert assessment of our readiness for a pandemic rated us no 2 out of 195 nations. That was in ...Oct 2019. 👇 https://www.ghsindex.org/ 
14./ A flaw in the ST article is of simple logic. It points out our pandemic strategy had been built around flu and says that relies in part on the build-up of herd immunity. So logically even had we lavished resources on that plan we'd still be preparing for the wrong disease.
15./ We would still have had to pivot and change tack. So by all means criticise our long obsesssion with flu but this was not an innovation of Boris or the Tories. South Korea by contrast entirely rewrote their plan in 2014 after their third experience of a coronavirus outbreak.
16./ It's fair to criticise the running down of PPE stores but the article admits these go out of date. That's one reason no govt had stockpiles sufficient for this pandemic. Criticise by all means a reliance on China and global supply chains but this was not a UK problem alone.
17./ And far from being complacent the UK govt may have over-reacted (tho who wouldn't in the circumstances). We now have spare capacity on ventilators and there's growing concern among some clinicians about how they may do more harm than good for some COVID patients.
21./ Even when Merkel then made her heartfelt speech on 11th March she was criticised for suggesting 70% would be infected and hinting all Germany could hope to do was win time and slow the spread. She was soon pushed into a pivot by lockdown hardliners. Who'd be a politician?
22./ Don't expect to read any of this in our provincially obsessed & self-righteous media. By the end of February most of the British media had only just begun to give COVID-19 proper attention. But it was a low priority compared to Brexit, Huawei, and who could forget Meghan?
23./ Maybe those 38 days are better described as wasted by the media. They could now make up for that failure by boldly interrogating evidence, even perhaps taking an unpopular stance on what to do next. So much easier tho to shout gotcha during a national crisis.
24./ The govt's response was flawed. It was everywhere. They shouldn't have started from where they did. Surprise surprise. It's the easiest trick in the book to find someone to say "I told you so". In truth, this piece wasn't about holding power to account. It was a hatchet-job.
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