How can the UK COVID-19 Inquiry bring about meaningful change?
How can the UK COVID-19 Inquiry bring about meaningful change?
17 March 2022

Key points
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The announcement of a statutory public inquiry into the handling of the COVID-19 pandemic is welcome, as no other type of investigation has greater power or independence. But the Hallett inquiry faces a daunting task that will involve difficult decisions about priorities.
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This long read is designed to help inform what the parameters and structure of the inquiry could be, as well as setting out a sense of what it might realistically cover. The draft terms of reference published by the government propose a wide-ranging inquiry – but it is essential to recognise the trade-offs involved in doing so. Taking too long could risk compromising the inquiry’s timeliness and prospects for bringing about meaningful change.
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An effective inquiry is essential to prepare the health system for future shocks. The primary purpose of the Hallett inquiry should be to identify the lessons learned from the pandemic response and create the impetus for changes needed to prevent another human, social and economic disaster on a comparable scale.
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A rapid synthesis of evidence on contextual factors such as the state of health and care services and funding, and existing health inequalities, would help to surface what shaped the response to and impact of COVID-19.
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But there are two critical issues where the inquiry can make the most distinctive and valuable contribution – the adequacy of preparations made prior to COVID-19, and decision making within government during the pandemic.
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Public inquiries are not renowned for moving quickly, but there are options for structuring the inquiry to deliver a robust and timely set of findings, and several ways in which government could support Baroness Hallett to do so.
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Bringing about catharsis is often considered an important objective of public inquiries, but this will require careful and deliberate thought. Meaningfully engaging and involving the people most directly affected by the pandemic will be one of the most challenging aspects of the inquiry.
- untangling the truth about contested and contentious events
- bringing about catharsis, reconciliation and closure
- holding individuals and organisations accountable for errors and omissions
- learning from what has happened to avoid comparable future failures
- restoring public confidence after an individual death, a major disaster or public scandal
- serving political needs to create the case for change or show ‘something is being done’.
Adapted from: Walshe K, Higgins J. The use and impact of inquiries in the NHS. BMJ 2002; 325 (https://www.bmj.com/content/325/7369/895).
Several of these purposes are reflected in the draft terms of reference for the Hallett inquiry. This would task the inquiry with producing a factual narrative account clearly intended to untangle the truth of how the response unfolded and document the wider consequences of the pandemic. Based on this account, the inquiry would be expected to identify lessons to be learned to ‘inform the UK’s preparations for future pandemics’. The reference to listening ‘to the experiences of bereaved families and others who have suffered hardship or loss’ also suggests ministers expect the inquiry to offer catharsis for those who have lost the most during the past 2 years.
The apparent motivation for an inquiry focused on learning for the future, rather than accountability for the past, may be met with an understandable degree of cynicism. However, a public inquiry cannot determine criminal or civil liability. And, with no standing mechanism to hold government to account for acting on inquiry findings, ministerial commitments to learning lessons may bolster the prospect of the Hallett inquiry leading to meaningful change.
Distilling which lessons to learn
There is also an objective case for distilling the learning from the pandemic response to ensure the UK is better placed to respond to future emergencies:
- There was every opportunity to prepare for a pandemic. The first UK national risk register, published in 2008, described the likelihood and potential impact of pandemic influenza and emerging infectious disease. Pandemic response plans were developed and tested under successive governments. While those preparations focused on influenza – as emerging infections were thought less likely to affect the UK – a disease like COVID-19 was not unforeseeable.
- The UK was hit harder than most comparable countries. Among the G7, only the US recorded more excess deaths in the first year of the pandemic. As of 11 March 2022, the UK had recorded more than 162,000 deaths within 28 days of a positive test, 747,000 hospital admissions with COVID-19 and 19.5 million confirmed cases of the virus. The wider disruption of NHS and social care services created delays and gaps in the diagnosis, care and treatment of millions of people. More will experience physical and mental ill health resulting from the pandemic, from the long-term effects of the virus itself to the wider social and economic consequences. The extent of the national response was unprecedented in peacetime, with a fiscal legacy that may affect the public finances for decades.
- Learning from the response will help to avoid or mitigate future catastrophes. Before 2020, the 1918 influenza pandemic was the worst in recent history – but the next pandemic is unlikely to wait another century. New global pandemics are increasingly likely, underlining the need for better national responses and international cooperation to prevent, detect and respond to future threats. There is an urgent need to understand how the UK can prevent another human, social and economic disaster on the scale of that caused by COVID-19.
Learning from national responses to the pandemic is also a common theme of investigative activity in other countries. While the term ‘public inquiry’ is not unique to the UK, neither is it universal. However, there is a high degree of thematic consistency in the scope of the various pandemic-related inquiries, reviews and audits planned, in progress or completed in Europe and North America – identified through a European Health Observatory rapid review in June 2021 (Table 1). The most common themes are examining the management of the pandemic response, the impact of COVID-19 and the measures taken to control the virus, and the provision of testing, contact tracing and personal protective equipment (PPE).
Table 1: National inquiries, reviews and audits related to the pandemic response in Europe and North America
Country | Scope | |||||||
Pandemic preparedness | International coordination | Management of COVID-19 response | Impact of pandemic and response | Provision of testing, PPE and contact tracing | Impact on adults needing long-term care | Wider health, social and economic consequences | ||
Inquiry completed or ongoing | Belgium | X | X | X | X | X | ||
Finland | X | X | X | |||||
France | X | X | X | X | X | X | X | |
Ireland | X | X | X | X | X | X | ||
Italy | X | X | X | |||||
Latvia | X | X | X | |||||
Norway | X | X | X | X | X | X | ||
Portugal | X | X | X | |||||
US | X | X | X | X | X | X | ||
Other related studies or monitoring |
Canada | X | X | X | X | X | ||
Croatia | X | X | ||||||
Cyprus | X | X | ||||||
Finland | X | |||||||
Israel | X | |||||||
Netherlands | X | X | X | X | X | X | ||
Pandemic-related audits | Czech Republic | X | ||||||
Slovakia | X | X |
Source: Analysis of a summary of responses from country experts in the COVID Health Systems Response Monitor collated by the European Health Observatory in June 2021.
- a decade of austerity in public services
- gaps in pandemic planning and the adequacy of stockpiles
- real-terms public health cuts
- constrained NHS capacity (but strong institutional support)
- political neglect of social care
- fragmentation within health and social care
- centralised decision-making structures
- political upheaval
- pre-existing inequalities.
Two critical areas of focus
A rapid synthesis of existing evidence in these areas would give the Hallett inquiry a crucial head start, while coordinating with related ongoing investigations may help alleviate its workload. This would allow the inquiry to focus on less well understood aspects of the pandemic response and flesh out the context for examining what happened, why and how to bring about meaningful change. There are two critical issues where the Hallett inquiry should be able to make a unique and distinctive contribution, which are included in the draft terms of reference but should be prioritised.
Pandemic preparedness
The first is the adequacy of the preparations for a pandemic made prior to COVID-19. The Civil Contingencies Act 2004 requires various public bodies to plan for different types of emergency. Regular exercises are held to test and improve response plans, but neither the findings of such exercises nor wider assessments of preparedness are routinely published. In 2019, the UK’s ability to rapidly respond to, and mitigate the spread of, an epidemic topped an international ranking constructed from publicly available data.
However, several reports of exercises undertaken prior to 2020 – but only published more recently – raise important questions about the UK’s preparedness and emergency response plans. Did the UK simply prepare for the ‘wrong’ type of pandemic? Were emergency stockpiles compromised by austerity? Did the risk of a ‘no deal’ Brexit undermine government’s capacity and preparedness for other emergencies? How could pandemic response plans and the implementation of those plans be more effective? This is a relatively discrete topic, common to several of the inquiries established by other countries, on which the Hallett inquiry should be able to shed considerable light.
Government decision making
The second is the decision-making process within government during the pandemic. The response to COVID-19 was clearly constrained by factors that may be amenable to long-term action but were essentially fixed in the short term – for example, staff shortages in NHS and social care. Nevertheless, the effectiveness of the response was also influenced by how well the government used the considerable information and resources that were available.
The importance of decision making was emphasised by an independent panel established by the World Health Organization to review international responses to COVID-19. The panel found the most effective national responses were based on early recognition of the threat, timely and authoritative decisions and efficient coordination of urgent action across government and society. By contrast, the hardest hit countries tended to ignore, downplay or deny the threat, devalue the scientific advice, delay crucial decisions, and either fail to act, focus on a narrow set of measures or fail to coordinate wider action effectively.
Many of those critical decision points in the UK’s response to COVID-19 are already apparent – allowing the inquiry to narrow its focus on specific decision points or periods of time. Areas the inquiry could focus on include:
- activating COBR – the committee convened in national emergencies – to discuss emerging reports of a novel virus
- agreeing the initial ‘contain, delay research, mitigate’ strategy
- imposing the first national lockdown in March 2020
- easing restrictions and creating the tier system for local lockdowns
- imposing subsequent lockdowns in late 2020 and early 2021
- staged implementation of the roadmap for easing restrictions in 2021
- activating ‘Plan B’ following identification of the Omicron variant.
While the outcomes of these and other decisions played out in public, insight into how decisions were actually made is much more limited. For instance, the select committee sessions with former health secretary Matt Hancock and particularly former Chief Adviser to the Prime Minister Dominic Cummings, hinted there is far more to unpack.
By using its powers to compel disclosure of relevant evidence and cross-examine witnesses under oath, the Hallett inquiry can scrutinise the how, why and when of what happened within government to produce a nuanced and authoritative account of how critical decisions were made. This could include the sequence of events leading to decisions, encompassing periods of indecision. Who made decisions and on what basis? What considerations, assumptions and biases shaped those decisions? What alternative options were considered? Who was involved in deliberations and, possibly crucially, who was not? How and when was expert advice, analysis and information presented to decision makers? How were resulting actions coordinated across government and communicated to the public?
This matters because those calling the shots during the next major emergency may be doing so for the first time, without direct experience of the current pandemic. Knowing how events played out, with the benefit of hindsight, may obscure the near-impossible dilemmas of the time – making highly consequential decisions, based on incomplete, fast-changing evidence, under conditions of major uncertainty. Under such circumstances, some errors may have been inevitable. But others were avoidable, such as repeating the mistake of delaying restrictions in autumn 2020 despite clear advice to act sooner.
Further reading
Collection
COVID-19 impact inquiry
This UK-wide inquiry explored the relationship between the pandemic and people's health and health...
External link
COVID-19 policy tracker
The COVID-19 policy tracker 2020 documents national policy and health and social care system...
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