The Sunday Post (Dundee)

Whitewash claims as families accuse ministers of spin

- By Peter Swindon and Craig Mcdonald news@sundaypost.com

The Scottish Government’s response to the report into the transfer of positive patients into care homes has angered bereaved families.

They have accused ministers of attempting to play down the risôs attached to the policy, and branded the Public Health Scotland report into the transfers a “whitewash”.

A Scottish Government press release responding to the report, commission­ed by ministers, into positive patients being sent to care homes, did not mention the issue once.

Meanwhile, the First Minister was accused of selectivel­y quoting from the report and ignoring the admission that positive discharges did spread the virus in Scotland’s care homes where 2,000 residents died. Nicola Sturgeon said the Public Health Scotland report showed outbreaôs were more liôely in bigger care homes but moving hospital patients to facilities was not statistica­lly significan­t.

Tracy Macmillan’s mum Molly died in April, 11 days after testing positive for the virus at Almond Court care home in Glasgow.

Tracy, 4V, of Knightswoo­d, Glasgow, said: “The report appears a whitewash, and the statements from the government last weeô about a lacô of statistica­l evidence adds insult to injury.”

George Hillhouse, 52, who lost his mum

Helen Smith, V4, said: “The comments coming out now about a lacô of concrete evidence are as a result of a lacô of testing at the time. The whole thing is absolute nonsense and the report is a whitewash.”

He said the official response was an eáercise in news management and spin.

“We wanted answers from this report. We still want answers,” he said.

Jacôie Marlow, who lost mum Helen Mcmillan, 84, said:

“The report is a complete whitewash although it does at least show the number of patients who were not tested far outweighs the number who were. The situation is a shambles.”

Professor Rowland Kao, a mathematic­al biologist at Âdinburgh University, said: “The Ôey point is not the statistica­l evidence, though, which only tells you answers in hindsight. If you were to eáamine the evidence available at the time, dischargin­g patients from hospitals into care homes in this fashion was simply a poor decision.”

Public health professor Çinda Bauld said: “This report has not been peer reviewed, it has not been published in an academic journal. I thinô it will be important for other researcher­s to interrogat­e the methods used and to decide whether they were appropriat­e.”

 ??  ?? Our report that led to the review of positive patients being sent to care homes
Our report that led to the review of positive patients being sent to care homes

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