South Wales Echo

160 workers are redeployed in contact tracing service

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GWENT councils and Aneurin Bevan University Health Board (ABUHB) have redeployed 160 workers to help with the contact tracing service in response to the coronaviru­s pandemic.

The contact tracing service, which was set up at the beginning of June, aims to identify and contact people who have been in close contact with a known case of coronaviru­s.

A Caerphilly council report says there are currently 135 full-timeequiva­lent roles that have been redeployed and trained in contact tracing across Gwent.

However, the report says this is not sustainabl­e and is intended to be in place only until the end of August.

Caerphilly currently has 30 staff redeployed to the existing service and the council’s head of legal services says there is currently “no pressure” from their original service for them to return.

However, there are plans for staff to return throughout the course of September, which will bring a need to replace those staff for the track-andtrace service.

In particular, several staff were redeployed from leisure services to the track-and-trace service, but the Welsh Government’s announceme­nt that leisure centres can reopen from August 10 will trigger the need for staff to return to their original service.

The report says: “Whilst staff will return to their substantiv­e roles at the end of the temporary redeployme­nt arrangemen­t, they may be called upon again”

When fully staffed, the Gwent contact tracing service will have the equivalent of 348 full-time positions, of these 106.5 will be from Caerphilly.

The report says: “From 1 June to July 15, 109 cases eligible to be contact traced have been referred into the service, 108 have been successful­ly contacted generating 316 contacts.”

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