Qatar Tribune

British unions call for tougher COVID measures in schools

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ED CATION unions have urged the British government to consider reintroduc­ing extra safety measures in schools as an expert warned about the level of coronaviru­s circulatin­g among secondary pupils.

The latest figures from the Office for National Statistics (ONS) show that around one in 15 children in school years to 11 in England are estimated to have had Covid-19 in the week to October 2 - the highest positivity rate for any age group.

Professor Calum Semple, a member of the Scientific Advisory Group for Emergencie­s (Sage), which advises the Government, said there is a risk children in that age group could reach herd immunity through infection rather than vaccinatio­n.

He told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme: “There is a risk of that and it’s not a good way to get to herd immunity.

“Commentato­rs would usually say it’s ridiculous to aim for herd immunity using natural wild-type infection because that brings with it disease and damage to children both from acute disease and potentiall­y long Covid.” He said there is “no pretence that this is a deliberate attempt to get herd immunity - that would also be ridiculous”.

He suggested “some exibility would be great” for parents in England to be able to take children to vaccinatio­n centres.

Most children in England aged 12-15 are currently being offered one dose of the Pfizer vaccine by immunisati­on teams at schools.

Prof Semple said the uptake so far in this age group has been “really encouragin­g”, but added: “I’m sure it will take time for confidence to build among many parents.” His comments come as five education unions wrote to Education Secretary Nadhim Zahawi urging him to look at bringing back stronger safety measures for schools.

The GMB union, nite, nison, National Education nion (NE ) and NAS WT teaching union said they are also writing to local authoritie­s and directors of public health asking them to consider measures in their local areas.

Kevin Courtney, joint general secretary of the NE , said: “We are concerned that the Government is standing by while Covid cases surge across schools.

“It is evident that more needs to be done, and sooner rather than later, to prevent further massive disruption to children’s education, caused either by children contractin­g Covid-19 or Covid-related staff absence.” im Kennedy, nite national officer for education, called on Mr Zahawi to “reset the safety agenda for schools” and argued that with winter approachin­g “the whole range of measures to keep school children safe needs to be deployed - the rising level of infections in schools demand it”.

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