The Sunday Post (Inverness)

Ministers told English officials but not public about first cases

- By Mark Aitken POLITICAL EDITOR

The Scottish Government told English health officials about Scotland’s Covid “Ground Zero” while refusing to make it public, we can reveal.

The outbreak happened at a Nike conference in Edinburgh in late February before ministers confirmed what was thought to be Scotland’s first Covid-19 case a week later. However, Public Health Scotland informed Public Health England of the outbreak linked to the sportswear giant’s conference on March 4. But while Public Health

‘ It’s time to start being open and honest with people

England was told about two positive cases from the Nike conference, one in Ayrshire and one in Grampian, details about infections from the internatio­nal conference were not made public. A source said: “Public Health Scotland informed Public Health England of one case on March 2 and two cases on March 4.”

The First Minister has insisted details were not made public at the time because of patient confidenti­ality but the explanatio­n has been questioned by critics. The outbreak from the conference, revealed by the BBC two weeks ago, has been linked to at least 25 coronaviru­s cases. Eight of the individual­s were Scottish, six who attended the conference and two secondary contacts.

Ian Murray, Labour’s Shadow Scottish Secretary, said: “The Scottish Government has failed to be transparen­t with people. By covering-up the outbreak in Edinburgh city centre, people across the UK were kept in the dark about how quickly coronaviru­s was spreading and prevented from making personal decisions about attending public events. “We now learn the Scottish Government informed Public Health England and had the power to decide if the British public should know, but chose to keep the outbreak secret.

“It’s time for the government to remove the veil of secrecy and start being open and honest with people.”

Ms Sturgeon has denied a cover-up, saying there were genuine concerns about patient confidenti­ality. But she has admitted it was “legitimate” to question how the cases were handled.

The Scottish Government said: “All appropriat­e steps were taken to ensure public health was protected, with more than 60 contacts traced in Scotland, and around 50 others traced in England, so there was an extensive contact-tracing operation.

“Given that there were cases in England, Public Health England was also part of the incident management team, which was provided with full details surroundin­g the circumstan­ces of the infections.

The UK Government said: “The chief medical officers of the four nations agreed, before there were any confirmed cases, that each administra­tion would announce their own cases, and would take their own decisions about what informatio­n was released. “Any informatio­n released about patients in Scotland, therefore, is a decision for the Scottish health authoritie­s.”

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