The Sunday Post (Newcastle)

A disaster plan? Labour leader questions Scottish pandemic response report which did not mention testing in 27 pages

- By Mark Aitken POLITICAL EDITOR

An emergency plan meant to shape Scotland’s response to a pandemic has “glaring omissions”, according to Scottish Labour leader Richard Leonard.

The Scottish Government has also been accused of failing to learn the lessons of Silver Swan, a major training exercise carried out in 2015 to test the country’s readiness for a major influenza outbreak.

The four-day event, which involved 600 people from NHS boards and health and social care partnershi­ps, resulted in a 27-page report which made 17 recommenda­tions.

Scottish Labour leader Leonard said: “This report identified issues around the supply and distributi­on of PPE and the preparedne­ss of the government in the event of a pandemic in 2016.

“Yet four years later, the very same government that commission­ed it appears to have learned very little

from this exercise. One recurring theme is the ‘difficulti­es associated with fit-testing’. But given that NHS Greater Glasgow & Clyde has had to draft in the army to assist with fittesting, it appears that not enough

has been done to address these difficulti­es.”

Mr Leonard also said there were “striking omissions” in the report, with no mention of the need for testing as part of a pandemic response.

He said: “The report states that PPE is only necessary ‘for staff carrying out higher-risk procedures involving infected patients’, whereas it is clear that limiting PPE has put health and care workers at risk of infection during the Covid-19 outbreak.

“This virus is not influenza, it is more like SARS and special contingenc­y plans should have been made to better protect the elderly, not least the huge risk posed in residentia­l care homes.

“If the government’s planning was purely centred on an influenza outbreak, ministers should explain why other situations were not also considered. If the government also carried out other planning exercises for conditions more comparable to Covid-19, it should publish these reports too. Additional­ly, many of the recommenda­tions seem weak and tentative given the potential severity of the situation being discussed.

He added: “The Scottish government should also publish the details of how each agency and sector involved responded to the report, and what changes were made as a result of it. The Covid-19 pandemic has impacted on everyone’s lives, and thousands of families have lost their loved ones. The public deserves to know the truth.”

Meanwhile, the UK Government has been urged to publish the findings of Exercise Cygnus, a threeday simulation carried out in 2016.

NHS doctor and campaigner Dr

Moosa Qureshi told The Sunday Post: “It is irrational and indefensib­le to conduct a learning exercise to evaluate preparedne­ss for an influenza pandemic, and then keep secret the learning points from that exercise.”

The Scottish Government said: “The learning points from Exercise Silver Swan were circulated to all health boards, local authoritie­s and regional resilience partnershi­ps to be incorporat­ed into ongoing planning for situations such as this.

“This included plans for distributi­on of PPE and prioritisa­tion of key staff. Testing of patients is not routinely included in pandemic influenza exercising.”

 ??  ?? The Silver Swan report runs to 27 pages
The Silver Swan report runs to 27 pages

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom