Irish Daily Mail

CASES WON’T MEAN WHOLE CLASS IS ISOLATED

- By Cate McCurry

IF A pupil is diagnosed with Covid in school, the child’s class won’t automatica­lly be isolated or the school shut, HSE chiefs has said.

Abbey Collins, a HSE public health consultant, said isolating a whole class or school can be counter-productive, as well as harmful and disruptive to students’ education.

Dr Collins said that if a positive Covid-19 test is detected in a school, public health authoritie­s would adopt a ‘measured approach’.

‘If a child who has been in class is diagnosed with Covid-19, I would not expect routinely to be calling all of that class a close contact and excluding a whole class. I hope it would be more measured than that,’ she said.

‘It would be based on the informatio­n we get from the case, the circumstan­ces of the case and within the school. Our hope is that we would be more measured because the recommenda­tions, plans and implementa­tions within schools settings will hopefully facilitate that.

‘If we deem there is genuine concern of onward spread and transmissi­on within either a class or a broader setting in the school, then we will act fast and hard on that as appropriat­e.’

HSE chief executive Paul Reid told the briefing that Ireland’s spike in Covid-19 cases is not a second surge but rather a ‘significan­t ramp-up’ of cases.

He said the ‘biggest defence’ is by following public health measures to avoid needing strict measures to be enforced locally, regionally or nationally.

The end-to-end turnaround time for tests last week was 2.2 days. The number of HSE workers carrying out contact tracing will be trebled by the end of the week.

‘That’s largely due to volume and due to more complex cases that we’re having to contact and, thirdly, because people have more contacts,’ Mr Reid said.

He also acknowledg­ed there have been issues with the Covid-19 Tracker App and that a large number of users have deleted it.

He said that while there had been 1.65million downloads, there are about 1.2million active users.

More than 300 people diagnosed with Covid-19 have uploaded their anonymous key to the app and almost 700 people using it have received a close-contact notificati­on since the app was launched.

 ??  ?? Spike: HSE chief Paul Reid
Spike: HSE chief Paul Reid

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