The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

Covid confirmed at Dundee school

KINGSPARK: Fears coronaviru­s may already have spread

- EMMA CRICHTON AND JAKE KEITH

Dundee children have been tested for coronaviru­s after a positive case was confirmed at a city school.

Parents were told yesterday that an adult “within” Kingspark School had tested positive for Covid-19.

The individual developed symptoms over the weekend and it is feared the virus has spread throughout the school.

One parent, who asked not to be named, said her son and partner have already been tested in connection with the case.

A joint statement from NHS Tayside and Dundee City Council said: “NHS Tayside’s health protection team has been made aware today of a single case of Covid-19 in an individual connected with Kingspark School in Dundee.

“A problem assessment group has been convened to investigat­e the situation and identify any further actions.”

It comes after First Minister Nicola Sturgeon said she could not rule out more local lockdowns following outbreaks in Perthshire.

Ten people have tested positive at the 2 Sisters chicken factory in Coupar Angus, while two cases have been confirmed at Perthshire schools.

Dozens of pupils at two Perthshire schools have been ordered to isolate at home after classmates tested positive for coronaviru­s.

NHS Tayside confirmed two cases at Newhill Primary in Blairgowri­e and Oakbank Primary in Perth.

Both schools will stay open, but a total of 41 people – including children, teachers and other staff – have been told to quarantine for 14 days.

Parents received an email on Monday evening, confirming their children were a “close contact” of someone who had tested positive.

“Please do not be unduly alarmed, as the evidence to date is children are less likely to get Covid than adults, and when they do it’s usually less serious,” the letter signed by Public Health Medicine consultant Dr Emma Fletcher states.

Some parents have criticised the way the informatio­n was released, with an official public alert from NHS Tayside issued just before midnight on Monday.

Some said they were not aware of the situation until after they had dropped off their children. There was a notable drop in attendance at both primaries.

Local MSP and Deputy First Minister John Swinney said the cases would be a “significan­t worry to parents” but locals should be reassured that there was no indication of wider transmissi­on.

He said: “Necessary contact tracing procedures have been followed, and I am grateful to NHS Tayside’s health protection team for their swift response.

“I fully understand the concerns parents will be feeling during this unpreceden­ted time.

“However, we have robust procedures in place to ensure Covid cases within schools are identified and managed as quickly and safely as possible.

“In the interim, I wish the affected pupils and their families well, and I hope they recover quickly.”

First Minister Nicola Sturgeon stressed the infections had started outside of schools. She said: “It is really important to stress these are considered at this stage to be community clusters with an impact on schools, rather than school-based clusters.

“That is an important distinctio­n. All of the cases we have seen so far that have involved school students suggest transmissi­on has taken place outside of the schools, not in the schools.”

Parents at the gates of each school said they were generally content with the way officials were dealing with the cases, but said they had been left with little – or in some cases zero – warning.

Susan Wilson, whose daughter Tianna attends Newhill, said: “It is a worry. I’ve been shielding until very recently because of problems with my immune system. It looks like they’re on top of this for now, but if there are any more cases I will probably take my daughter out of school.”

A mother at Oakbank said she was only made aware of the situation after dropping off her child. She said: “I’m just finding out now. It would have been nice to know beforehand, but I would have dropped them off anyway. It’s up to parents to make these choices.

“They (Perth and Kinross Council and NHS Tayside) should have given us a bit of a heads-up.”

Kathleen Bones, whose child is in P6 at Newhill, said: “I only found out after the NHS made the announceme­nt at midnight. I’d read rumours on Facebook in the evening, but I didn’t know if they were true. It’s concerning, but it sounds like they are doing everything they can to contain it.”

A council spokesman said parents of affected classes at both schools were contacted on Monday. “We shared informatio­n about the two confirmed cases on our website and social media as soon as was possible, as did NHS Tayside,” he said.

“All parents and carers whose children attend Oakbank and Newhill received further informatio­n direct by letter from their schools today and we will continue to provide regular updates.”

He added: “We recognise not all parents may use social media or go online, and to that effect informatio­n is being provided in a range of ways to parents/carers. Any parents who require the informatio­n in other languages will get these letters translated.”

Dr Emily Stevenson, from NHS Tayside’s health protection team, said both pupils were experienci­ng mild symptoms, adding: “NHS Tayside and Perth and Kinross Council worked very quickly together and we are confident we have identified everyone who is required to self isolate.

“Anyone with Covid-19 symptoms, such as a cough, fever or loss of or change in senses of taste or smell, even if they are mild, should stay off school or work and seek Covid-19 testing.”

Jacquie Pepper, depute director of education and children’s services at Perth and Kinross Council, said: “This will be a worrying time for parents, however there is no evidence of wider transmissi­on and children should attend school as normal.”

Talk of Scotland moving into the fourth and final phase of the cornavirus lockdown lifting plan is now worryingly scant. That the first three phases were achieved in relatively short order without major hiccups is testament to the efforts of the public to suppress the virus.

But, like climbing a mountain, each further step towards the peak is difficult, more strenuous and comes weighted with more risk.

Scotland was in sight of that peak and, officially anyway, it still is. But it is obvious that progress has slowed and, in some cases, come to a crashing halt.

Aberdeen’s new lockdown was the first major signal that the journey was about to get bumpy.

Now events in Perthshire and Dundee have added to fears that our collective re-emergence into society will be a protracted affair, with some areas potentiall­y to be locked down for a second time.

Ms Sturgeon said she expected news from the Covid-hit chicken plant at Coupar Angus – where a mobile testing unit was set up yesterday to screen workers – to get worse before it gets better.

That is concerning on both a human and economic level. And the emergence of Covid cases in three Tayside schools within days of pupils returning to class shows how thin the ice is on which we are treading.

These remain uncertain times.

 ?? Picture: Mhairi Edwards. ?? Parents dropping off children at Newhill Primary School in Blairgowri­e yesterday morning.
Picture: Mhairi Edwards. Parents dropping off children at Newhill Primary School in Blairgowri­e yesterday morning.
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