Over the past fortnight, ministers and their scientific advisers have made a series of claims over testing. Which of them stand up to scrutiny?

Claim: UK coronavirus testing will reach 100,000 per day

Reality: Amid criticism that the UK was lagging badly behind other countries, Boris Johnson declared in March that coronavirus testing would increase to 25,000 tests a day, with NHS frontline staff being among the first to benefit.

At the start of April, testing was well short of the interim goal of 10,000 tests a day, with only 2,000 of about half a million NHS frontline workers having been tested. As a result, scores of NHS staff have been self-isolating without knowing if it is safe for them to return to work.

On Thursday, the health secretary, Matt Hancock, set out a goal of moving from 10,000 tests a day to 100,000 by the end of April. This would include swab testing in Public Health England and NHS labs, using commercial partners including universities and private businesses, and introducing antibody blood tests.

The Guardian UK: Politics Weekly The government fails to fix testing problem: Politics Weekly podcast Sorry your browser does not support audio - but you can download here and listen https://audio.guim.co.uk/2020/04/01-41723-gdn.pw.200401.ds.NHS_struggles_to_cope.mp3 00:00:00 00:38:16

Claim: testing is being held up by a shortage of reagents

Reality: As nations scramble to scale up testing, the global suppliers of key chemicals called reagents are struggling to meet demand. According to the British In Vitro Diagnostic Association, companies are working flat out to boost their supply but are having to prioritise where the mixtures are sent.

The reagents needed are specific, and different ones are required for different PCR machines – the equipment used to test for the virus by detecting its genetic material. Smaller companies are being consulted about other virus testing strategies. A better pandemic preparedness plan might have foreseen the surge in demand for testing materials and arranged to act swiftly, critics say.

To add to the confusion, the Chemical Industries Association, which represents the UK’s very substantial chemicals industry, told ITV News on Tuesday that its members said there was no shortage of the relevant reagents.

On Thursday during the daily government briefing, Hancock explained that demand for materials had led to a shortage of both swabs and reagents. The swabs issue had been fixed, he said, but they were still tackling the reagents issue, which is a global challenge.

NHS rules hampering coronavirus testing drive, say scientists Read more

Claim: home test kits will soon be available

Reality: The government has bought millions of home test kits that can show if someone has had the virus and so, hopefully, developed some immunity. But no one has been able to say when the kits will be in circulation.

At the end of March, Prof Sharon Peacock, the director of the national infection service at Public Health England, told MPs on the science and technology committee that the finger-prick tests would be evaluated within the week, and that mass testing could start days after.

The government later backtracked, saying it would be some time before the tests were available and that blood samples would need to be posted to a laboratory for analysis. The tests look for antibodies to the virus, not the virus itself, so cannot pick up new infections.

Hancock said on Thursday that large-scale antibody testing – to see if someone has been infected with the virus and recovered – would be rolled out only when clinicians were confident it was a valid test.

Science Weekly Covid-19: how do we test for it? Sorry your browser does not support audio - but you can download here and listen https://audio.guim.co.uk/2020/03/27-52465-Covid-19_+how_do_we_test_for_it.mp3 00:00:00 00:12:50

Claim: a bad test is worse than no test

Reality: Prof Chris Whitty, England’s chief medical officer, said it was crucial for coronavirus tests to be evaluated carefully because “one thing worse than no test is a bad test”. The reason is simple: a bad test could give an infected doctor the all-clear, sending them back into hospital to spread the virus to colleagues and patients.

But some scientists argue that in the crisis, the NHS needs to be more creative and relax its normally stringent rules. NHS test protocols demand specific equipment, enzymes and other chemicals known to produce reliable test results. But with those chemicals and other items in short supply, alternatives can be used to get around the bottleneck and get tests out more quickly.

These tests will not be the gold standard the NHS prefers, but with proper evaluation, scientists believe they would be as good.