Daily Record

Now’s time to act

Calls for new booster programme

- BY VIVIENNE AITKEN Health Editor

COVID is on the rise and with several new sub-variants in circulatio­n there are fears of a fourth wave.

It is, therefore, vital that the government does everything within its power to drive down transmissi­on before the highly infectious New York variant takes hold.

No one wants a return to restrictio­ns on our daily lives but people need to help break the chains of transmissi­on by taking sensible precaution­s like wearing face coverings in crowded places and meeting up outside if possible.

The Scottish Government also has to ensure the autumn booster programme is ready to kick in for the most vulnerable in our country.

Public health expert Professor Linda Bauld believes anyone over the age of 50 should be added to the booster programme.

The Scottish Government needs to take her recommenda­tion to the Joint Committee on Vaccinatio­n and Immunisati­on.

Covid is rife again, with an estimated 180,000 Scots infected, and we need every weapon in our armoury to defeat it.

COVID cases in Scotland have spiked by almost a third in the past week with the highly infectious New York variant on the rise.

Public health expert Professor Linda Bauld has called for an extension of the vaccinatio­n programme to all over-50s.

In the past week, there were 15,541 confirmed cases in Scotland – about 2200 cases per day – up 30.5 per cent on the previous week.

The most recent Office for National Statistics figures showed about one in 30 Scots with the virus – more than 182,000.

There have also been rises in the numbers of people in hospital and in intensive care.

The most recent figures show there were 696 new hospital admissions and an average of 867 people in hospital with Covid in the last week. There were also 20 new admissions to intensive care.

With the Scottish Government’s decision to end asymptomat­ic testing at the end of April there are no exact numbers but Bauld, Professor of Public Health at Edinburgh University, said we are “certainly in the middle of a spike”.

She said: “The case numbers are not a terribly good indication of what’s happening at the moment because it depends on who takes a test. The ONS infection rate is a better indicator.”

Bauld said there had been a rise in cases since May but it was still too early to say if we were experienci­ng a fourth wave. She said, however, the increased hospital admissions was not necessaril­y an indicator the virus was becoming more serious, suggesting it was more likely people going into hospital for other matters were being tested and discoverin­g they were infected.

She added: “The data shows these sub-lineages are a bit more transmissa­ble but there is not any evidence they cause more serious disease.”

But she said: “If we see these hospital numbers continue to go up over a more sustained period, my colleagues will become more concerned.”

Bauld said there was “no money tree” to allow for the continuati­on of asymptomat­ic testing but added: “We would all value wider availabili­ty of testing if it was more affordable.

“We are waiting to see what will happen for the vaccine programme. There was very good uptake of spring boosters but I would like to see the JCVI extending boosters to more groups.”

Professor Rowland Kao, chair of veterinary epidemiolo­gy and data science at Edinburgh University, said: “It seems to be increasing more in Scotland than in England and Wales. Why, we don’t know.

“Our residual immunity here may be different.

“Broadly speaking, we probably did slightly better vaccinatio­n-wise – in that we got boosters out more quickly – and ironically that could mean we have less residual immunity now.”

We are certainly in the middle of a spike in the number of cases PROF LINDA BAULD ON VACCINE PROGRAMME

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 ?? ?? TAKE CARE New variant is on increase and booster jabs are advised
TAKE CARE New variant is on increase and booster jabs are advised

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