The Scotsman

Emergency crews’ concern of ventilatio­n contaminat­ion

- Alexander Brown Westminste­r Correspond­ent

Emergency crews have raised concerns after the ventilatio­n system became contaminat­ed in Scotland’s biggest ambulance station.

Dead pigeon sand other potentiall­y infectious material was found in the air ducts at Edinburgh City station in King’s Haugh. The Scottish Ambulance Service (SAS) has been accused of keeping workers in the dark over the scale of the problem.

It comes fours years on from two patients dying at a flagship hospital after having contracted a cryptococc­al fungal infection linked to pigeon droppings. the airborne disease at the Queen Elizabeth University Hospital in Glasgow was blamed after patients inhaled the fungus cryptococc­us, usually found in soil and pigeon droppings.

GMB Scotland, the biggest union in the service, is urging management to detail the scale of the problems at Edinburgh City station, which remains partially sealed off after the contaminat­ion was exposed five weeks ago. Emergency crews have nowhere to sit but the kitchen, the union said, after other parts of the station, including the team leader’s office, crew room and training room were sealed while emergency remedial work, expected to be completed by Wednesday, is ongoing. Staff have been told a deep clean of the affected areas will take place after the repairs by specialist contractor­s and before the sealed-off areas are reopened.

Senior SAS managers have moved to reassure staff, insisting in an email: “For reassuranc­e, the risk of exposure has been deemed as extremely low by our infection control and H&S [health and safety] teams.”

However, GMB Scotland organiser Karen Leonard said the key workers who makeup its staff would want to know exactly what contaminat­ion was found and what had been done to make the system safe.

She reported the contaminat­ion and the rising concern of crews to the Health and Safety Executive, but has been told it could not investigat­e while remedial work is ongoing.

Ms Leonard is now urging ambulance service executives to reveal the risk assessment­s undertaken and the work being done.

She said :“large parts of the stationcon­tinue to be closed, which offers little comfort to staff told to accept there is no risk. If a risk assessment has been done as stated, let staff see it. If another is to be done before the all-clear is given, let the staff see that too. All paperwork should be laid out for staff and let them decide the level of risk. To simply insist that all is well without any documentat­ion or detail is unacceptab­le and only serves to deep en suspicion among staff.

“This has been an object lesson in how not to handle such a situation and staff deserve better.”

A scottish ambulance service spokespers­on said: “We undertake regular proactive assessment­s of our buildings and environmen­ts. The location was non-clinical and as soon as the minor issue was identified, immediate action was taken to rectify the situation based on expert guidance from our infection prevention and control team.

“Staff welfare is paramount and, following a comprehens­ive risk assessment, no risk to staff was identified."

Large parts of the station continue to be closed, which offers little comfort to staff

GMB Scotland organiser Karen Leonard

 ?? ?? The Scottish Ambulance Service has been accused of keeping workers in the dark over the scale of the problem
The Scottish Ambulance Service has been accused of keeping workers in the dark over the scale of the problem

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