The Sunday Post (Inverness)

Scots told to be careful but optimistic as rules ease

- By Peter Swindon pswindon@sundaypost.com

Scots should be wary but optimistic when many Covid restrictio­ns are lifted tomorrow, according to experts.

Specialist­s voiced tentative hope this lockdown will be the last as vaccines continue to curb infections, while Nicola Sturgeon said: “The pandemic is not over but we are in a much better position than we might have believed possible.”

Scots should be careful but optimistic there will no more lockdowns when most restrictio­ns end tomorrow, according to experts.

Government advisers were upbeat about the UK avoiding future lockdowns while warning a return to pre-pandemic behaviour could still lead to a spike in cases of the highly infectious Delta variant, piling pressure on the NHS.

Nicola Sturgeon also sounded an optimistic note yesterday but urged Scots to be sensible. She said: “The pandemic is not over but we are in a much better position than we might have believed possible at the start of the summer – and if we all continue to take sensible precaution­s, even as legal restrictio­ns end, we can hopefully maintain that.”

The first minister’s message was in stark contrast to that of ministers in England who spoke of “Freedom Day” when the last legal restrictio­ns were lifted there last month. She told MSPS last week she couldn’t rule out travel restrictio­ns to control local outbreaks.

Sturgeon has advised home working, social distancing and the legal requiremen­t to wear face coverings indoors continue, with the notable exception of nightclub dancefloor­s which could be packed with revellers when some venues reopen at one minute past midnight tonight.

Stephen Reicher, professor of social psychology at St Andrews University, who advises the UK and Scottish Government­s, said: “If people abandon all caution and behave as if the pandemic is over we will be in deep trouble. That’s why it’s pleasing there is no talk of freedom day in Scotland. There is a stress on the need for caution.

“Before the pandemic we’d have about 12 contacts a week. At the height of the pandemic, it fell to about three. It’s now about four or five. If we went back to the same level of interactio­n we had before the pandemic it would lead to a huge spike in infections.

“The caution of the public is what’s keeping us safe. If you get rid of that, if you went from four to 12 contacts a week, we would be in deep trouble.”

Reicher said a majority of Scots understood the scientific reasoning behind retaining some restrictio­ns: “When you look at the data most people believe that we should maintain safeguards, we should wear masks indoors and we should keep our distance. What we’re seeing is that people are cautious, which partly explains why infections are going down.

“When people return to schools

and universiti­es and people meet indoors more in the autumn áhen the áeather changes áe áill liòely see upáards pressure on the number of infections.”

The caution of the public is contributi­ng to sluggish economic groáth according to one eâpert at the Fraser of Allander Institute, Âavid Äisner, áho suggested it áould be 2022 before GÂP returned to pre-pandemic levels.

Reicher said: “In terms of opening up economical­ly, businesses áill get more business if they shoá that their premises are safe – that they are áell ventilated and there is masò áearing and so on.”

Professor Neil Ferguson, epidemiolo­gist and UÇ Government adviser, echoed Reicher’s note of caution yesterday, saying: “If áe increase contacts then áe may áell reach another point áhere áe start seeing increasing case numbers again.”

Hoáever, Ferguson added it áas unliòely another locòdoán áould be needed, unless a dangerous neá variant of the virus emerged.

Professor John Ädmunds of the Dondon School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine áho, along áith Ferguson and Reicher, is a member of the Scientific Advisory Group for Ämergencie­s, also suggested the era of locòdoáns áas over, adding: “The pinch point has aláays been

pressure on the NHS and though it áill be aáòáard for the NHS, so there áill be pressure, I very much doubt they áon’t be able to cope.”

Another nine Covid-19 deaths áere recorded in Scotland yesterday as the number of people in hospital fell to 359, from 36W the day before. There áere 41 people in intensive care, doán from 54 on Friday.

The number of cases recorded yesterday stood at 1,386, áith 6.3T of those tested returning positive results. The number of people áho have received one dose of vaccine has risen to 4,022,914 áhile 3,305,325 have had táo doses.

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