The Sunday Post (Newcastle)

Care home body: Covid patients went in to homes

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The chief executive of care homes umbrella body Scottish Care has confirmed hospital patients who had tested positive for Covid were moved to care homes.

Dr Donald Macaskill, chief executive of Scottish Care, told MPs on the Scottish Affairs Select Committee that, at the time, official

guidance indicated a positive test was not a barrier to dischargin­g patients to care homes.

He said: “That was the how and the why of how individual­s who were positive were transferre­d into care homes.

“Now clearly, as we got to know more about the disease, the clinical understand­ing of the nature of pandemic, resulted in a decision made later that individual­s who were positive should not be transferre­d but in the early days that was not the clinical view.

“Some care homes refused to accept positive individual­s and others, particular­ly because the individual­s were returning to their own home, clearly did.”

Scottish Conservati­ve health spokesman Donald Cameron said: “This is yet further confirmati­on that Covid-positive patients were admitted to care homes.”

The Post told last month how dozens of potentiall­y infectious patients were transferre­d to care homes after a positive test as part of a government push to empty hospitals.

However, Scotland’s largest health boards – NHS Greater Glasgow and Clyde and NHS Lothian – did not respond to The Post’s Freedom of Informatio­n request on cost grounds.

The Scottish Government has ordered a Public Health Scotland probe after The Post’s investigat­ion, due to report back by the end of the month.

First Minister Nicola Sturgeon told MSPs she hoped the investigat­ion will “ensure we learn the appropriat­e and proper lessons”.

 ??  ?? Scottish Care chief executive Dr Donald Macaskill
Scottish Care chief executive Dr Donald Macaskill
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