The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Contact tracing to be piloted by NHS Fife

Health board one of three in Scotland poised to test out new technology as part of government’s TTIS strategy for crisis

- DEREK HEALEY dhealey@thecourier.co.uk

NHS Fife will today become part of a major pilot programme of the next step in Scotland’s war against coronaviru­s.

The scheme, which is expected initially to last two weeks, will also see NHS Lanarkshir­e and NHS Highland test out the software contact tracers will use to collect informatio­n they need digitally.

The Scottish Government said it will build on existing contact tracing technology in place across the NHS and will allow health boards to trace contacts in greater numbers and more quickly.

It said this is the first step in moving towards an extended test, trace, isolate and support (TTIS) approach, which will be used to keep transmissi­on in communitie­s low as the country moves out of lockdown.

The method consists of identifyin­g cases of Covid-19, finding individual­s the people have been in close contact with, and then asking those individual­s to self-isolate for at least 14 days to stop the disease spreading further.

Earlier this month, officials said testing and tracing would be “key” in the battle against the virus and any possible easing of measures. However, it has been revealed that despite 8,000 applicatio­ns, no one has yet been hired as a contact tracer.

The Scottish Government said 600 NHS staff members are now ready to take up the work as part of a process that will see 2,000 people recruited.

Health Secretary Jeane Freeman said: “Technology will be an important tool to help us move towards the test, trace, isolate and support approach and safely exit lockdown.

“The software we are developing in Scotland is built on a tried and trusted platform and will allow us to carry out contact tracing on a much larger scale than has been necessary until now.

“It will also focus on supporting public health teams to identify outbreaks and reduce transmissi­on in high-risk groups and settings by making it easier for staff to collect and record informatio­n.”

Speaking at the Scottish Government’s daily briefing in Edinburgh, Ms Freeman said the software will be rolled out to all health boards by the end of May if the pilot is successful and then enhanced further during June.

Latest figures show 2,103 patients in Scotland have died after testing positive for Covid-19, an increase of nine. The number of Covid patients in hospital fell by 108 overnight.

Scottish Labour’s health spokeswoma­n, Monica Lennon, said Ms Freeman has “serious questions to answer” over the failure to hire any contact tracers.

“Contact tracing should never have been abandoned,” she said.

“The Cabinet Secretary for Health has been too slow to hire contact tracers despite clear demand for the role.”

However, Ms Freeman said it was always the first “prong of the strategy” to utilise existing NHS staff and then recruit further after relevant pre-employment and disclosure checks are completed.

“All of that work is under way and I am confident that we will get to that 2,000 number through that three-fold process but also with the help of other groups we are talking to, such as the St Andrew’s First Aid Service,” she said.

Meanwhile Scotland’s clinical director, Jason Leitch, said the UK Government’s “proximity” app – which has been downloaded more than 55,000 times since being launched on the Isle of Wight – may not be adopted as part of the TTIS approach.

The Scottish Government has opted for a system of contacting people by telephone initially, and Mr Leitch said any such app would only be adopted in Scotland if it works and adds value – but he stressed it is not necessary for the TTIS approach.

Ms Freeman also announced the appointmen­t of Professor Marion Bain as an additional interim deputy chief medical officer for Scotland, alongside Dr Nicola Steedman whose appointmen­t was announced in April.

Most recently, Prof Bain has been working as the director of infection prevention and control at NHS Greater Glasgow and Clyde.

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 ?? Pictures: PA. ?? Health Secretary Jeane Freeman, top, during the Scottish Government’s daily briefing in Edinburgh, and Prime Minister Boris Johnson, who is urging the British people to remain patient amid the lockdown.
Pictures: PA. Health Secretary Jeane Freeman, top, during the Scottish Government’s daily briefing in Edinburgh, and Prime Minister Boris Johnson, who is urging the British people to remain patient amid the lockdown.
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