The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Experts told to ‘learn from Tayside’ after aggressive testing saves lives

- PETER JOHN MEIKLEM

Scottish ministers are coming under increasing pressure to widen the scope of the Covid-19 advisory group to include experts from Tayside.

Professor James Chalmers, chair of respirator­y research at the British Lung Foundation, said the government is being encouraged to learn from the success of regions like Tayside in controllin­g Covid-19, as the country moves into the next phase of the pandemic.

Tayside has been recognised as an “exemplar” by First Minister Nicola Sturgeon and was this week described as the “South Korea of Scotland” in reference to its early and aggressive use of testing to control cases.

Prof Chalmers, a frontline member of the Covid 19 team and Dundee University academic, said: “Local managers and clinical teams had made crucial early decisions in Tayside that had unquestion­ably saved lives.

“We will only know at the end of this exactly how many lives have been saved by early testing, but it is a considerab­le number.

“It is critical people understand that every test saves lives. If a positive test allows one member of health or social care staff to self-isolate, then that prevents that person from passing it on to other staff or vulnerable patients and breaks the chain of infections.”

Prof Chalmers said NHS Tayside managers had been “ahead of the national curve” since the start of the pandemic after setting up a staff testing facility in early March and rapidly setting up a specialist coronaviru­s unit separated from the rest of Ninewells Hospital.

He questioned the fact the Scottish Government’s Covid-19 advisory group, whose advice underpins key decisions, does not currently contain representa­tion from Tayside or from respirator­y or intensive care specialist­s.

“Statistics and modelling can only take us so far in this response – in the early part of the Covid-19 epidemic the modelling told us that the UK public would never accept lockdown, this was proven completely wrong as the public has responded remarkably well to the rules,” he said.

“Modelling also told us it was impossible to test and isolate cases to prevent transmissi­on, yet that’s exactly what South Korea, New Zealand and other successful countries have done so it is important that government learns these lessons and learns from what has worked.”

He said ministers should either expand the group or consult more widely as they navigate lifting lockdown, while keeping transmissi­on rates low.

He added: “Local managers in Tayside made a decision to protect their staff and patients and they did that at a time when it was not national guidance.”

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