The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Tayside ‘ready for worst-case scenario’

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A Tayside health boss has said the region is well prepared for the worst-case scenario should coronaviru­s strike.

Drew Walker, NHS Tayside’s director of public health, said all key partner agencies will make sure they are “ahead of the game whatever happens”.

He said “It is too early to say the extent to which we need to be worried.

“I think what is happening in Italy is just an indication of what could happen here. We could see something like this in Scotland but we may not.

“We could get through the next few months without seeing what’s happening in Italy.

“There are hopes that when the summer months arrive that the virus will be less transmitta­ble and less virulent.”

Mr Walker said there is a resilience partnershi­p in Tayside which involves all of the key agencies and its first meeting took place on Friday.

“You always hope for the best but you prepare for the worst. We are prepared for any eventualit­y.”

People could be banned from gathering in large numbers to contain coronaviru­s, Scotland’s chief medical officer has said.

Dr Catherine Calderwood cited the response to cases in Italy, where Serie A football matches are being played behind closed doors, church services in the affected regions have been cancelled and Milan’s famous opera house, La Scala, has temporaril­y shut down.

Speaking on BBC Good Morning Scotland, she said the government and NHS were working on “containmen­t first” and then – if coronaviru­s was discovered in this country – a range of measures to try to limit the number of people infected.

“If we do have a cluster, as has happened in Italy, then we move into delaying the spread,” Dr Calderwood said. “Delaying the spread would mean some of the measures that have happened already in Italy – stopping people coming together in large groups so that one or a few individual­s do not spread to many more around them.”

Dr Calderwood said deaths from this strain, known as Covid-19, appear to be more common in elderly people.

China’s outbreak could hit its peak by the end of February, she suggested, but a European outbreak could last “several months”.

She added: “We have been planning now for many weeks for the inevitabil­ity of any case in Scotland and that preparedne­ss has started with our NHS but we now have stepped up our Scottish Government resilience unit so that we have plans put in place for across all of our county beyond our healthcare system.”

 ??  ?? Dr Catherine Calderwood, Scotland’s chief medical officer.
Dr Catherine Calderwood, Scotland’s chief medical officer.

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