Britain on Thursday said heir-to-the-throne Prince Charles, who has coronavirus, did not jump the queue for a test because his symptoms and condition met the criteria.
Charles, 71, tested positive for coronavirus earlier this week but is in good health and is now self-isolating at his residence in Scotland with mild symptoms along with his wife Camilla, who tested negative, his office said.
When asked why the heir to the British throne had a test while millions of frontline health workers have not, Britainโs junior health minister, Edward Argar, said: โMy understanding is that his symptoms, his condition, met that criteria.โ
โThe Prince of Wales didnโt jump the queue,โ Argar told Sky news.
According to advice on the Scotlandโs National Health Service website, most people with symptoms of the virus are simply instructed to stay at home and will not be tested.
โGenerally, youโll only be tested for COVID-19 if you have a serious illness that requires admission to hospital,โ the advice says.
Scotlandโs Chief Medical officer said there were clinical reasons as to why the royals were tested, and a royal source said that Charles had a test because of his age and medical history, while declining to give further details.
However, on social media there was some criticism of the decision to test the royals when others had been denied testing because of a shortage.
โWe wish him well, but this is a national crisis in which we all have a stake and in which we all risk losing loved ones,โ campaign group Republic, which wants to abolish the monarchy, said on Twitter. โNow is the time for equal access to medicine. No exceptions.โ
Charles is not thought to have seen his mother, Queen Elizabeth, 93, since he might have become infectious with the virus. She is at her Windsor Castle residence to the west of London with her husband, 98-year-old Prince Philip.
Buckingham Palace said the queen was in good health and British newspapers carried pictures of the monarch holding a phone as she held her regular weekly audience with Prime Minister Boris Johnson remotely on Wednesday.
REUTERS