The Sunday Post (Newcastle)

Care homes get a single passing mention in the pandemic plan...testing and the supply of PPE do not get mentioned at all

Report exposes gaps in emergency planning

- By Peter Swindon pswindon@sundaypost.com

scotland’s most senior doctor was warned the country could not properly prepare for a pandemic because there was already too much pressure on staff and resources, a secret report has revealed.

Acting chief medical officer Dr Gregor Smith led a review of Silver Swan, the Scottish Government’s pandemic planning exercise, in 2016 when he was told of concern about implementi­ng the emergency blueprint.

The report of the feedback summit revealed senior officials feared services would struggle to deliver the emergency plan. It said: “Given the pressures on services, people are working in crisis every day and senior managers need to recognise this.”

Delegates at the event in December 2016 also warned that staff shortages would be a major problem in a pandemic. The report said: “There are significan­t business -as-usual staff shortages, making stepping up in an emergency even more challengin­g.”

We revealed the findings of Silver Swan eight weeks ago but the previously unreleased review document raises fresh concerns about the readiness of Scotland’s health and care services to deal with a pandemic.

Silver Swan mentions care homes in passing only once and states an emergency stockpile of personal protective equipment will be able to cope with the “worst-case scenario.” There is also no mention of testing to establish the spread of the virus.

Care homes, particular­ly the movement of elderly patients into homes to clear hospital beds without testing, the shortage of PPE and a struggle to carry out enough tests have been three critical issues since Covid-19 hit Britain.

Dr Smith was involved in a UK-wide pandemic planning exercise – Cygnus – which warned of the dangers of moving hospital patients to care homes during an outbreak but the Scottish reports did not address the potential risks.

Conference delegates raised concerns about the availabili­ty of PPE, but the Scottish Government said it had stockpiles to cope with a modelled “reasonable worst-case” pandemic.

Yesterday, Scottish Liberal Democrats leader Willie Rennie said there are “glaring omissions” in the report and a public inquiry should be held to examine whether the Scottish Government acted on the concerns raised. “This report shows health boards and health profession­als expressed startling concerns to the government that they weren’t well enough resourced to be able to properly plan and prepare for a pandemic,” he said.

“What’s also important is what’s not been thought about in this preparator­y exercise. Recognitio­n that care homes will be particular­ly vulnerable settings during a pandemic and the absence of a discussion on testing capacity are glaring omissions.

“Now is not the time for looking back – we are still far from eradicatin­g this devastatin­g virus – but when a public inquiry is eventually held into the handling of this crisis, it will need to look closely at the concerns that were raised here and ask the tough questions about why they weren’t listened to.”

The conference, at Tulliallan Police College, was held to review progress following Silver Swan the previous year.

The Silver Swan report uncovered gaps in crisis planning. At the December 2016 review – more than a year after the Silver Swan tabletop exercise – 95 delegates from health boards, local authoritie­s and emergency services were asked to offer feedback about pandemic planning on sticky notes.

The government report about the conference warned a pandemic is recognised as the single most disruptive event facing Scotland. However, it added: “Many delegates made the point that resource pressures and competing priorities were having a significan­t impact on the ability to properly plan and prepare for a pandemic.”

NHS staff at the event also raised concerns. The report said: “There is a conflict between the pressures being experience­d by all parts of the NHS and the ability to plan effectivel­y for a pandemic.”

Delegates, who were asked to put their feedback on the sticky notes, also warned that pandemic flu planning was too specific, and the

Scottish Government should look at the potential for an outbreak of other viruses.

The report asked: “Might it be better to have more generic public health plans which can be flexible and scalable to meet a variety of needs?”

The December 2016 event was opened by Dr Smith, who was then deputy chief medical officer. His address covered his experience both with Exercise Silver Swan and Exercise Cygnus, a separate UK-wide flu pandemic planning exercise carried out in October 2016.

Cygnus warned of the risks of widespread infection of the vulnerable if plans to move people from hospitals to care homes were put in place.

The Scottish Government has come under pressure for moving more than 900 hospital patients to care homes without testing them for coronaviru­s. There have been 1,749 deaths in care homes where the cause or suspected cause was coronaviru­s, 46% of the total number of deaths in Scotland.

Dr Smith’s review of Silver Swan in 2016 did not examine the risks of shifting hospital patients to care homes during a pandemic. Delegates told the conference that health and social care partnershi­ps – which are responsibl­e for the care of older people – were “too busy with day-to-day pressures to devote time to pandemic planning”.

Exercise Silver Swan uncovered issues with PPE in 2015 but, while concerns were raised about who should get it and fitting it properly, delegates were assured there would be no problem with supply.

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 stockpilin­g and the distributi­on of PPE and prioritisa­tion of key staff.

“Exercise Silver Swan was a pandemic flu exercise, not a Covid-19 exercise and the relevant issues to a flu pandemic were rightly covered. This coronaviru­s has existed for around five months and the exercise is not comparable to the situation we are dealing with now.”

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PPE includes face masks
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