Western Morning News

Asking parents to test for Covid-19 is a ‘huge ask’

- ELEANOR BUSBY & HARRIET LINE Press Associatio­n

ASKING parents to take responsibi­lity for testing their children regularly for Covid-19 is “fraught with difficulty” and a “huge ask”, the leader of the UK’s largest teaching union has said.

Mary Bousted, joint general secretary of the National Education Union (NEU), warned parents may not want to test their children at home as it could have implicatio­ns for their paid work. Her warning came after a health minister confirmed the Government is looking at how coronaviru­s testing of pupils could help the return to school.

Helen Whately said there is “work in progress”, after being questioned about reports that parents of secondary school pupils could be asked to test their children at home twice a week.

When asked about the reports that families could be asked to use rapid coronaviru­s tests on their children when they are back in class, Dr Bousted said: “I think again that is fraught with difficulty as well, because I think there has been a big parental reaction to the notion that they’ve got to swab their children up their noses or down their throats. And of course lots of parents probably will not want to know if their child has got Covid because they will be asymptomat­ic and that has implicatio­ns for them being able to work.

“I do think that’s a huge ask and if the Government is going to make that ask of parents – and if it’s going to make any asks to schools in terms of testing – it really has to be very clear about the science on which that is based, because otherwise it will be difficult to make it happen.”

Dr Bousted added that there are “so many challenges” about the accuracy of lateral flow tests that the Government will have to make it “very compelling” in its explanatio­n about why schools and parents should invest their time and resources into doing this.

Education unions met Department for Education officials yesterday ahead of Boris Johnson’s announceme­nt of the “road map” out of lockdown, which is due next week.

Headteache­rs’ leaders have suggested the return of secondary school pupils may need to be staggered to allow students to be tested for Covid-19 as they arrive back in class. Ms Whately told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme: “There is work being done to look at how testing will help schools come back. But there will be more details set out about that next week.”

Asked about the Telegraph’s report that parents of secondary school pupils will be asked to administer rapid flow tests, Ms Whately said: “I’m not going to get drawn into that. There is work in progress looking at how testing can support schools to come back.”

Geoff Barton, general secretary of the Associatio­n of School and College Leaders, said: “It’s accepted that secondary school pupils might have to return in a slightly staggered way because of the logistics of mass testing. If they come back into the classroom all at the same time, they would have to be taken out of class for the tests to take place, by which time they will have already mixed. So it would make more sense for them to be brought back into school in phases and tested as they return.”

Mr Barton said this idea was being discussed with the Government, but no final decision had yet been made about what will happen from March 8.

DEMONSTRAT­ORS against Myanmar’s military takeover returned to the streets yesterday, after a night of armed intimidati­on by security forces in the country’s second biggest city.

The police rampage in an area of Mandalay, the country’s secondbigg­est city, where state railway workers are housed showed the conflict between protesters and the new military government is increasing­ly focused on the businesses and government institutio­ns that sustain the economy.

State railway workers had called a strike last Sunday, joining a loosely organised Civil Disobedien­ce Movement (CDM) that was initiated by medical workers and is the backbone of the resistance to the February 1 coup that removed the elected civilian government.

The railway strike has received support from ordinary citizens who have placed themselves on tracks to stop trains the military have commandeer­ed. The efforts by Mandalay residents to block a railway line on Wednesday apparently triggered the retaliatio­n that night.

Less than an hour after the 8pm start of the nightly curfew, gunshots were heard as more than two dozen men in police uniforms, shields and helmets, marched in tight formation by the railway workers’ housing.

Several posts on social media included photos of people with small wounds, with claims they were caused by rubber bullets. Some unconfirme­d reports said several railway workers had been arrested.

Elsewhere, about 200 people demonstrat­ed yesterday near Kanbauk, in the south of the country, outside premises involved in a major pipeline operation that pumps gas from offshore fields for export.

Street protests continued in other cities. In Yangon, the nation’s biggest city, protestors tried to hinder security forces by abandoning cars in streets.

 ?? Associated Press ?? Demonstrat­ors protest in Mandalay, Myanmar, yesterday against the takeover of power in the country by the military junta
Associated Press Demonstrat­ors protest in Mandalay, Myanmar, yesterday against the takeover of power in the country by the military junta

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