A CHILMARK-BASED disaster response charity RE:ACT today (June 18)marks the end of its 15-month long Covid-19 emergency response.

Op RE:ACT, which launched on March 27, was the charity's longest continuous operation to date lasting 449 days.

Teams of volunteers were deployed across the country, including Salisbury where they carried out welfare checks and also supported the vaccination hub at City Hall.

Salisbury Journal:

Ben Lampard, RE:ACT director of humanitarian operations, pictured below, said: “RE:ACT has been on the frontline of the UK’s Covid response for 15 months but now the emergency phase is over, the time is right for us to step down.

"Although the Delta variant has caused a surge in infections, it’s clear the vaccination programme is working and the UK is on the road to recovery.

Salisbury Journal:

"RE:ACT’s role is to provide immediate assistance at the onset of a crisis, so we’re not used to such long deployments, but we’ve sustained our operation for as long as we were needed.

"It’s taken a significant toll on the team but we’re immensely proud of the support we’ve given."

During the Op RE:ACT the charity has worked in collaboration with emergency services, local councils, government agencies, the military and the voluntary and community sector, to identify and respond to unmet needs.

Salisbury Journal:

RE:ACT has provided support to 61 NHS hospitals, 16 NHS vaccination sites, 20 mortuaries and 21 Covid testing sites, helping with a range of tasks, including strategic planning and coordination, large-scale logistics and rapid volunteer mobilisation to plug critical gaps.

During the peak of the Covid crisis, RE:ACT volunteers supported temporary mortuaries to help manage excess deaths.

RE:ACT teams also supported several hospital Covid Red Zone wards and Critical Care Units to help care for the most seriously ill patients, supporting nursing staff by carrying out non-clinical duties, including proning (patient turning to expand the lungs).

Over the course of Op RE:ACT, more than 8,500 additional volunteers were recruited to bolster RE:ACT’s response, the majority of them veterans, and a total of 1,268 individual RE:ACT volunteers were deployed, many of them on multiple occasions. On its busiest single operational day, 314 RE:ACT volunteers were deployed – the largest deployment in its history.

Salisbury Journal:

Ben added: “I would like to thank every single one of the RE:ACT team, from our incredible volunteers to members of staff, for all they have given.

"They have shown remarkable resilience and commitment whilst under extreme pressure.

"I would also like to thank our donors and operational partners for their generous support. RE:ACT will now enter a period of recovery but we’re ready to step up again for the next emergency or crisis, applying the many lessons we have learned during our Covid response to better serve people in need, both in the UK and overseas."

Salisbury Journal:

The charities Chilmark HQ will close for a week to give the small team of staff a break and the opportunity to catch up on leave.

When it reopens, the charity will focus on restarting its in-person training and getting ready to deploy internationally again towards the end of the year.

But it will continue to be ready to deploy in the event of an emergency or crisis.

Visit: re-act.org.uk

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