The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Perthshire nursery gets three-day deep clean after E.coli infection discovered

HEALTH: NHS Tayside and Perth and Kinross Council investigat­ing how infection happened

- EMMA CRICHTON ecrichton@thecourier.co.uk

A Perthshire nursery school is at the centre of a three-day deep clean after a case of E.coli was detected.

Health bosses say the bacteria was detected in a child with links to Errol Nursery, but stressed the risks to the wider public were very low.

NHS Tayside and Perth and Kinross Council are investigat­ing how the infection may have come about.

The school remained open while the nursery area was cleaned thoroughly on the advice of public health experts. Council officials insisted the operation by Tayside Contracts was being carried out as a precaution.

The health board wrote to parents last week to say experts were investigat­ing a single case of suspected Escherichi­a coli, more commonly known as E. coli.

The germs are commonly found in farm animals and can cause sickness, diarrhoea and a fever in humans.

An NHS Tayside spokeswoma­n confirmed yesterday the infection was in a nursery pupil and that investigat­ions are ongoing.

She said: “NHS Tayside’s health protection team is aware of and currently investigat­ing a single suspected case of E.coli non O157 infection in a child who attends a nursery in Perthshire. As a precaution, a letter has been issued to parents of children at the nursery for informatio­n and reassuranc­e. The risk to the wider public is very low.”

The statement was backed by the council which said the source was believed to have come from outside the nursery.

A spokeswoma­n said: “Perth and Kinross Council has been informed of a single possible case of suspected E.coli at Errol Nursery, for which the source is a third party outwith the nursery.

“Following guidance from Public Health, Tayside Contracts is conducting a three-day deep clean of the nursery areas as a precaution­ary measure.”

Some strains of E.coli are harmless but others can cause illness, with young people and the elderly most at risk.

It can be caught by consuming contaminat­ed food or water, or through contact with a person or animal carrying the infection. Advice to avoid catching the virus includes thorough hand washing, especially after contact with raw meat or animals, as well as preventing cross-contaminat­ion of raw and cooked meat.

 ?? Picture: Steve MacDougall. ?? The nursery at Errol Primary School was deep cleaned as a precaution following the E.coli discovery.
Picture: Steve MacDougall. The nursery at Errol Primary School was deep cleaned as a precaution following the E.coli discovery.

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