The Scotsman

While Freeman admits the failures, Sturgeon exploits the pandemic

If First Minister had listened to concerns, errors could have been addressed, says

- Brian Wilson

To err is human and so is forgivenes­s. Errors come in all sizes with those made by politician­s open to more scrutiny than most.

By any standard, the error admitted to by the SNP Health Secretary, Jeane Freeman, in a valedictor­y interview is colossal. It involves decisions which remain close to incomprehe­nsible and thousands of associated deaths.

Ms Freeman deserves credit even now for acknowledg­ing the scale of misjudgeme­nt involved in the wholesale transfer of elderly hospital patients into care homes without being tested for Covid-19.

Between March and May last year, 3,061 patients were moved from hospitals to care homes without being tested prior to discharge. Even more astonishin­gly, 150 who had tested positive for Covid-19 were transferre­d. What did anyone involved in these decisions expect, other than the carnage that followed? Had they not watched scenes in Spain and Italy which demonstrat­ed the particular vulnerabil­ity of care homes?

There is a secondary story which Ms Freeman and her predecesso­r, Ms Sturgeon, should in due course be called to answer for. For years previously, our NHS had squandered vast amounts on bedblockin­g which also kept needful patients out of hospitals.

In one fell swoop when panic struck, this supposedly intractabl­e problem became capable of resolution. More than 3,000 hospital beds were emptied to make way for potential Covid-19 patients. Except it was no longer that straightfo­rward.

Ms Freeman explained: “I think our failures were not understand­ing the social care sector well enough. So we didn't respond quickly enough to what was needed in our care homes, but also in social care in the community.”

Again, fair play for frankness but, again, it is a remarkably serious admission. Was there nobody in the entire Scottish government structure who had noted the warnings,

which were certainly available, about the fragility of care homes’ ability to cope? Or was it the case that, as with so much else, dissenting voices were unwelcome so that silence became assent for a policy which proved disastrous?whatever credit may be due to Ms Freeman, it is not transferab­le to Ms Sturgeon whose acknowledg­ement of mistakes has been couched in such general terms as to be meaningles­s, and indeed self-serving; the superficia­l appearance of humility while refusing to acknowledg­e specifics of failure.

Instead, Ms Sturgeon continues to exploit her supposed success as an electoral tool. No fewer than nine times during the first leaders’ debate, she referenced her pandemic “leadership” as grounds for re-election. No mention of the worst care home deaths record in Europe or a mortality tally now past the 10,000 mark.

Her spooky party political broadcast maintained the theme. “Day after day, after day…”, the voice intoned as Ms Sturgeon’s image beamed from 50 television sets, a paean of praise to her own indefatiga­bility. Early in the pandemic, she realised the value of ubiquity. The statistics offer not a shred of evidence that it was beneficial but it was certainly useful.

I can identify the day when Ms Sturgeon’s persona should have been called out. On May 7, the Labour MSP Neil Findlay, who pursued this scandal with admirable tenacity, asked the First Minister: “Why on Earth are we continuing to discharge patients from hospitals to care homes without establishi­ng whether they are positive for Covid-19?”

Referencin­g the fact his own mother was in a care home, he pleaded: “Please stop that practice now to save lives of residents

and the great people who look after them.” As I wrote then, there was “nothing unreasonab­le in tone or content” about his question. Ms Sturgeon chose to interpret it as a personal slight, rebuking Mr Findlay for asking questions “in a way that suggests that we are not all trying to do everything that we possibly can in order to do the right thing”. Mr Findlay had committed no such offence but was inundated with online abuse for supposedly suggesting she wasn’t “trying”.

If Ms Sturgeon had spent more time listening and less positionin­g for what lay ahead, the grounds for Ms Freeman’s incredibly serious admission of errors could have been addressed much earlier.

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