The Sunday Post (Dundee)

Public health specialist challenges authoritie­s to provide proof campus is safe

- By Marion Scott mascott@sundaypost.com

Blue water scandal: Expert insists tests must be extended to ensure public safety

Aleading public health expert is calling for the government inquiry into a cancer cluster school to be broadened with a greater range of tests.

Professor Andrew Wa t t e r s o n said he “welcomed” new instructio­ns from Deputy First Mi n i s t e r Jo h n Swi n n e y to test water and soil at the Buchanan High and St A m b ro s e campus in Co a t b r i d g e w h e re four teachers have developed bladder cancer. But he said

those new investigat­ions needed to be extended, to include checks on air quality and tests of individual pupils and staff.

Professor Watterson, who has worked for the World Health Organisati­on, said the protocol for the review “did not go far enough”.

He said: “There are still many areas that need to be addressed if we are to get the whole picture, and they include testing the air as well as the soil and water – tests Mr Swinney has now asked for.“The new additions on environmen­tal monitoring are a good step forward, but I believe the parents have legitimate concerns about the health and safety of their children.

“There are certain substances such as arsenic which do need to be tested for. I’m also concerned that NHS Lanarkshir­e and North Lanarkshir­e Council continue to make statements and give assurances, but they have failed to provide the evidence to support what they are saying.”

The professor said the health board needed to properly explain exactly what tests and investigat­ions it had carried out and why it insisted the campus was not linked to the illnesses.

Professor Watterson, of Stirling University, said: “All of that has to be made clear and made available to the public.”

The Scottish Government said last week that the review would include soil and water testing as well as testing of the membrane used to contain the output of methane gas from the former dump site underneath the schools.

Josie Morgan, whose son Tommi was tested and found to have more than six times the normal level of arsenic, continues to believe his sudden blindness is linked to the school.

She said: “Wh i l e we welcome the review team’s decision to include soil and water testing at the campus, the new instructio­ns by the review group still do not go far enough.

“Until all the children and staff are properly tested and we get the truth about what has been causing so many illnesses, we won’t be happy.

“The government took too long to act and now the children have been away from the school environmen­t for too long for most contaminan­ts to show up in tests.

“We feel a vital opportunit­y has been lost. If tests had been carried out immediatel­y, we could have learned so much to help our own kids and serve to prevent this happening in the future.”

To m m i , 13, who has a u t i s m , we n t blind in October.

NHS Lanarkshir­e and North Lanarkshir­e Council insist there is no link betwee the school and Tommi’s condition, or four teachers all developing bladder cancer at Buchanan High.

Tommi’s mum Josie, of Plains, Lanarkshir­e, said: “Their suggestion that Tommi’s blindness could be diet- related is ridiculous. I’ve seen two specialist­s who think otherwise.

“If the NHS had acted quickly instead of writing to GPS to tell them they don’t support testing, perhaps we would all be closer to finding out what has really been going on at that school.”

Josie’s concerns have been echoed by MSP Alex Neil, who said: “We must get to the bottom of what has gone wrong here and what needs to be done to prevent this happening again.

“To do that the public health authoritie­s must collate all the health problems raised with GPS. The results should then be used to decide whether we need to consider testing the children.

“Paren ts are concerned because too many illnesses with commonalit­y a re being flagged up – headaches, fatigue, blurred vision, and nose bleeds.

“Unless we get to the root of what’s causing these problems, the community will not be satisfied.”

 ??  ?? Professor Andrew Watterson Blue water in the school toilets prompted health fears
Professor Andrew Watterson Blue water in the school toilets prompted health fears
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