News

More than 100 Royal Free London Trust Covid-19 patients believed to have contracted virus in hospital

More than 100 people are believed to have contracted Covid-19 in hospital at Royal Free London Trust, figures suggest.
By Federica Bedendo, Data Reporter

Source: PA
Source: PA

More than 100 people are believed to have contracted Covid-19 in hospital at Royal Free London Trust, figures suggest.

The British Medical Association said the NHS was already overstretched before the pandemic and warned bed capacity and staffing must be increased to control the spread of the virus in hospitals.

Analysis of NHS England data shows that, between 1st August and 21st March, 147 people were thought to have been infected with Covid-19 at Royal Free London NHS Foundation Trust, while being treated in hospital for other conditions. Nearly half of such transmissions were recorded in January alone when 70 people were believed to have been infected in the hospital.

Royal Free London Trust cared for 2,503 Covid-19 patients between 1st August and 21st March – meaning 6% are thought to have contracted the disease in hospital. This is below the 11% average for all NHS acute trusts across London. Across England, 40,670 people are thought to have been infected with Covid-19 in hospital since August – 15% of all inpatients with the disease.

Rob Harwood, chairman of the BMA consultants committee, said: “The NHS went into the current pandemic underfunded, understaffed and overstretched, and the knock-on effects – such as limited bed capacity – has unfortunately meant that controlling the spread of Covid-19 within hospitals has been more difficult than necessary.”


This story is published by Barnet Post, Barnet's free monthly newspaper and free news website. We are a not-for-profit publication, published by a small social enterprise. We have no rich backers and rely on the support of our readers. Donate or become a supporter.


For some time now, the BMA has been calling for the Government to urgently address issues that would go far in ensuring the hospital environment is as safe as possible.

NHS staff have been working tirelessly under extraordinary conditions – there’s no doubt that the spread of the virus throughout hospitals will have only increased stress levels for both patients and staff.”

He added that many doctors reported fearing catching the virus after seeing colleagues becoming seriously ill and that ensuring staff and patients are protected would enable the NHS to tackle the backlog created during the pandemic.

An NHS spokesman said:

“The ONS and other data conclusively demonstrate that the root cause of rising infection rates in hospitals is rising rates in the community. Since asymptomatic tests kits were made available for the first time by the Government’s Test and Trace programme in November, millions of staff have been tested helping to keep infections as low as possible, and all staff have been asked to rigorously follow Public Health England’s infection control guidance with hospital infection rates currently standing at around 4.2%.”


The Post needs you. No matter how small, your support makes a difference

Barnet Post is a community newspaper that holds authority to account, highlights inequality, promotes good causes, and provides a platform for local people. We do real local news with no paywalls, free to read for all. We can only do this with the continued support of our readers. If you can afford to, please consider supporting us with a small monthly or one-off contribution..

Monthly direct debit 

£5 per month supporters get a digital copy of each month’s paper before anyone else, £10 per month supporters get a digital copy of each month’s paper before anyone else and a print copy posted to them each month.  

Donate now with Pay Pal

More information on supporting us monthly 

More Information about donations

Tags