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Chamber

Meeting of the Parliament (Hybrid) 25 November 2020

25 Nov 2020 · S5 · Meeting of the Parliament
Item of business
Covid-19 (Roll-out of Testing Programme)
Freeman, Jeane SNP Carrick, Cumnock and Doon Valley Watch on SPTV

Last week in the chamber, I updated members on our plans to deliver Covid vaccinations. Today, I am grateful for the opportunity to provide an update on our plans to significantly expand testing. The further expansion is possible because of increases in our testing capacity, which is coming from the three new national health service regional hub laboratories, from Lighthouse laboratories and from new testing options.

Yesterday, the Glasgow Lighthouse laboratory reached the remarkable milestone of having processed 5 million tests.

Work on our three new regional hubs in NHS Scotland is progressing and I thank our microbiology, virology and healthcare science workforce, who have built the largest diagnostic capacity and are a critical part of Scotland’s Covid response. New options come from innovation in testing outside our labs—notably, the new lateral flow devices—bringing us significantly greater capability to test more people, more often.

I will come on to how we will use that capability, but I will first say a few words about the new tests. Lateral flow devices are rapid turnaround tests whereby samples are processed on site with no lab required and results being available in less than half an hour. The type that we are using first in our expansion—the Innova lateral flow test—has had extensive clinical validation by Public Health England and the University of Oxford. That validation found that the Innova lateral flow test has an overall sensitivity of 76.8 per cent, meaning that it will identity more than seven in 10 positive cases of Covid. That rises to more than 95 per cent of those with high viral loads—those who are likely to be the most infectious.

Understanding that matters, because, as we have said consistently from the outset, no test is 100 per cent accurate, and testing on its own does not reduce transmission. It helps to stop transmission only through the actions that are taken following the result: to isolate if positive and give contact tracers all the information about where we have been during the period when we may have been infectious so that close contacts can be identified and told to isolate—all of which is aimed at killing off the chain of transmission.

Testing is one layer of protection. All the others—from reducing contacts and keeping our distance, to wearing face coverings, enhanced infection prevention and control in our NHS and care settings, and vaccines, when they come—work to greatest effect only when they work together. Our senior clinical and scientific advisers recently reviewed our testing strategy and their advice was clear and unanimous: test people with symptoms, test for clinical care and, when capacity allows, prioritise to protect those who are most vulnerable to the worst harm. We now have that increased capacity and we will extend testing to many more people.

By the start of December, we will extend testing to all hospital admissions to emergency departments, acute assessment centres, maternity units, and emergency mental health units. By mid-December, we will extend that testing to all medical and surgical elective admissions. We will extend our routine testing of healthcare workers. Everyone who works in patient-facing roles in our hospitals, in the Scottish Ambulance Service and in Covid assessment centres in the community, and the healthcare professionals who visit care homes, will receive twice-weekly testing. The scale of that challenge is not to be underestimated: NHS Scotland employs more than 170,000 people and although not all are in patient-facing roles, the number who are is considerable.

We know that our front-line NHS staff are at the highest risk of being exposed to Covid-19 and we know that when community transmission rises, so, too, does the risk of outbreaks in our hospitals. We will therefore phase in that extension from the start of December, to be completed by the end of that month. I know that all those NHS staff who continue to deliver an extraordinary service, and who understand so well all that they need to do to protect themselves and the patients whom they care for, will welcome that additional layer of protection.

We will extend testing in social care. There are up to 42,000 care home residents across Scotland, all of whom are entitled to a designated visitor. We will use lateral flow testing on the day of the visit so that, if that test is positive, family members can take immediate action to isolate and avert the harm that could have arisen. We will roll out lateral flow testing to up to 12 early-adopter care homes across four local authority areas from 7 December. Learning from that, we will roll out to a further number of homes across an additional seven local authorities before 21 December, with full roll-out across all homes completed over January and early February.

Although that is positive progress and—I hope—good news, I am mindful of the approaching Christmas period and I do not want any resident or family member to be disadvantaged. For those not included in the lateral flow early adopters before Christmas, we will therefore provide access to PCR testing in the weeks beginning 21 and 28 December and 4 January.

Family and loved ones know better than anyone else that testing provides an additional layer of protection. On its own, it does not give risk-free visiting; however, combined with appropriate personal protective equipment and strict hand hygiene, I hope that it allows more relatives to visit their loved ones, reduces isolation and loneliness for care home residents and gives providers the additional confidence that they need in order to facilitate more visits.

There can be no question but that the home care workforce do a most critical job in supporting and caring for people so that they can continue to live as independently as possible in their own home. From mid-January, we are extending our testing programme to them, including permanent and visiting staff and personal assistants in a person’s home, covering residential settings, sheltered housing and day care.

This is a large group of people, who are doing very important jobs, but the very nature of the jobs that they do means that they work individually in a number of different homes and settings. The logistics of this are not straightforward, so we will phase in the testing for care-at-home staff also from mid-January, starting in the local authority areas that have the highest virus prevalence at the time, and expanding from there to cover the whole sector by March.

With the significant capability now available to us, we are also extending asymptomatic testing to entire groups and communities, to help us find positive cases even before a person develops symptoms. As members know, we are doing that, first, in partnership with our universities, so that tens of thousands of students can travel to their family homes safely at the end of this term. All students who are leaving their term-time address will be offered two lateral flow tests, three days apart, from next week, and, as part of the details that are to be set out shortly for the staggered return of university students in the new year, testing will again be put in place for them.

All school staff can currently access testing if they are concerned that they have been at risk of infection. In addition, enhanced surveillance in schools has been undertaken by Public Health Scotland. However, I know that, as transmission has risen or stayed stubbornly high in some of our communities, especially those that are now in level 4, school staff may have had concerns about risk. We will maintain the current access to asymptomatic testing, but, last week, the Deputy First Minister also gave a clear commitment to exploring the further extension of testing, and I am pleased to confirm that, from the return to school in January, we will undertake a number of pathfinder programmes to test deliverability in the school environment, with the objective of establishing a sustainable programme of asymptomatic testing among school staff.

Our testing capability now enables us to work with local partners to trial whole-community testing in exactly those areas where transmission has stayed stubbornly high. Next week, we will be deploying up to six additional mobile testing units and 20,000 home test kits to support work in five local authority areas: Glasgow City, Renfrewshire, East Ayrshire, South Ayrshire, and Clackmannanshire.

We will also set up an asymptomatic test site using lateral flow testing in Johnstone in Renfrewshire, which has one of the highest numbers of new cases per 100,000 people of any local authority in Scotland. That centre will have capacity to test up to 12,000 people a week. We are also actively planning wider targeted deployment for early January, including further asymptomatic test sites.

In deploying mobile units and home test kits, and in trialling the asymptomatic test site, we will work closely with local communities to harness their expertise in order to encourage high participation.

Testing is undeniably important, but it is just one layer of protection. Many layers are needed to fight the virus. Our increased capability to test more people, more often, is potentially powerful as we navigate our way through the coming months as safely as we can, alongside our nationwide vaccination programme.

With the plans that I have set out, we will move to testing hundreds of thousands of people without symptoms, in order to actively find the virus, and, with the continuing co-operation of people across Scotland, to prevent and break down chains of transmission before Covid-19 can cause the harm of which we know it is capable.

In the same item of business

The Deputy Presiding Officer (Linda Fabiani) SNP
The next item of business is a statement by Jeane Freeman on the roll-out of a testing programme. The cabinet secretary will take questions at the end of her...
The Cabinet Secretary for Health and Sport (Jeane Freeman) SNP
Last week in the chamber, I updated members on our plans to deliver Covid vaccinations. Today, I am grateful for the opportunity to provide an update on our ...
The Deputy Presiding Officer SNP
The cabinet secretary will now take questions on the issues raised in her statement. We are pushed for time, but I will allow around 20 minutes for questions.
Donald Cameron (Highlands and Islands) (Con) Con
I thank the cabinet secretary for the advance sight of her statement. We strongly welcome the further clarification of the expanded testing programme that h...
Jeane Freeman SNP
I thank Mr Cameron for his important questions. As Mr Cameron knows, we do not make testing mandatory. It is not mandatory for our NHS staff. There is a ver...
Monica Lennon (Central Scotland) (Lab) Lab
On the surface of it, there is quite a lot to welcome in the statement, but the devil is in the detail. People have been promised a lot already when it comes...
Jeane Freeman SNP
I do not think that I promise a lot and then do not deliver. The reason why members are getting this update today and not at any other point—when it would ha...
The Deputy Presiding Officer SNP
We really are pushed for time, so I must insist on concise questions and answers.
Annabelle Ewing (Cowdenbeath) (SNP) SNP
I, too, add my welcome to the significant expansion of the testing programme. What discussion has the Scottish Government had with NHS Fife and Fife Council ...
Jeane Freeman SNP
NHS staff will be able to access testing directly in their workplace or as close to their workplace as the health board and the Scottish Government can organ...
Brian Whittle (South Scotland) (Con) Con
I would like some clarification of the cabinet secretary’s answer to Donald Cameron’s question. I appreciate that she cannot make it mandatory for everyone t...
Jeane Freeman SNP
I cannot really do that either. At the minute, care homes have to meet certain criteria before different levels of testing are permitted by the local directo...
Anas Sarwar (Glasgow) (Lab) Lab
After eight months, this is progress, but—I am sorry—it is not good enough. Full care home testing will not be done until the end of February. That will be a...
The Deputy Presiding Officer SNP
Please get to your question.
Anas Sarwar Lab
Will the cabinet secretary offer testing care home residents and their families to allow them to have loved ones close to them at Christmas, so that they can...
Jeane Freeman SNP
If Mr Sarwar would like to read my statement, he will find that it answers his question. I will make another point. In February last year, NHS Scotland was ...
Alison Johnstone (Lothian) (Green) Green
I am delighted that all front-line NHS staff working in health and social care are finally going to be giving given weekly testing, which is something that m...
Jeane Freeman SNP
The commitment is not tentative. We have given a commitment that, in discussion with the Deputy First Minister, from the return of schools in January, there ...
Alex Cole-Hamilton (Edinburgh Western) (LD) LD
The news that lateral flow tests will be offered to students to confirm their Covid status before the journey home for Christmas will be a welcome reassuranc...
Jeane Freeman SNP
I think that I must have done something wrong when I was delivering my statement, because I did not hint at that at all; I said pretty clearly that testing w...
Stuart McMillan (Greenock and Inverclyde) (SNP) SNP
I welcome the cabinet secretary’s statement on the routine testing of healthcare staff. Will that testing also include maintenance staff who may be required ...
Jeane Freeman SNP
Yes, it will include estate staff, who undertake a number of roles and all of whom, at various points in their jobs, have to enter wards and other areas wher...
Jamie Greene (West Scotland) (Con) Con
I welcome plans for rapid testing to get students home for Christmas. However, other young adults, many of whom have disabilities, live in other forms of res...
Jeane Freeman SNP
The commitment that I can give is that I will talk to my colleagues the Deputy First Minister and Maree Todd to see whether there is anything that we can do ...
Joan McAlpine (South Scotland) (SNP) SNP
The cabinet secretary knows that I have been calling for the testing of carers in order to protect people with learning disabilities, who have a high rate of...
Jeane Freeman SNP
I apologise if that was not clear in the statement either, but that work will begin from mid-January for the staff that Ms McAlpine referred to.
Colin Smyth (South Scotland) (Lab) Lab
I welcome the plans for a system of two lateral flow tests, three days apart, for students leaving their term address, but why has the Government so far reje...
Jeane Freeman SNP
Our clinical advisers continue to talk with the airport authorities in Scotland. They have not yet reached a final view or agreement on that, but that work i...
Dr Alasdair Allan (Na h-Eileanan an Iar) (SNP) SNP
Many of my constituents work in the oil and gas sector and they are typically asked to get tested before going offshore. However, because they cannot access ...
Jeane Freeman SNP
I appreciate the points that Dr Allan made; he has made them before and I understand them. Two things are under way that might be of assistance in resolving ...