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Showing 60 of 2,354,908 contributions. Latest 30 days: 0. Coverage: 12 May 1999 — 25 Mar 2026.
The Deputy First Minister and Cabinet Secretary for Covid Recovery (John Swinney) SNP Chamber
09 Nov 2021
Covid-19
I will provide the update on the latest Covid-19 situation, on behalf of the First Minister. In giving the update, I will provide an assessment of the current course of the pandemic and our on-going consideration of how to respond; an update on the pressures on the national he...
The Deputy First Minister and Cabinet Secretary for Covid Recovery (John Swinney) SNP Committee
02 Sep 2021
Scotland’s Strategic Framework
Thank you, convener, and good morning. I welcome the opportunity to appear before the committee for the first time since my appointment as portfolio minister for Covid recovery. This is a vital part of the process of parliamentary accountability, which will undoubtedly strengt...
The Deputy First Minister and Cabinet Secretary for Covid Recovery (John Swinney) SNP Chamber
05 Oct 2021
Covid-19 Recovery Strategy
Presiding Officer, the coronavirus pandemic has had an enormous impact on the everyday lives of the people of Scotland. As a nation, we came together to fight the pandemic. We made sacrifices to protect ourselves, each other and the national health service. The virus, and the...
John Swinney SNP Committee
29 Apr 2020
“COVID-19—A Framework for Decision Making”
That is fundamentally a very difficult issue to reconcile. I think that the best way to think it through is to think about what effect Covid would have had on our society had we not taken the actions that we have taken. It is pretty fair to say that the health service would ha...
The Deputy First Minister and Cabinet Secretary for Education and Skills (John Swinney) SNP Chamber
12 Aug 2020
Return to School
The day our children start school for the first time is a moment that every parent remembers. However, I am aware that, in some parts of the country, although plans were in place to open schools today, roads have been closed due to severe flooding following last night’s storms...
The Deputy First Minister and Cabinet Secretary for Covid Recovery (John Swinney) SNP Chamber
02 Dec 2021
Covid-19: Preparing for Winter and Priorities for Recovery
This debate was initiated by the COVID-19 Recovery Committee, which it has been my privilege to appear regularly before since the election; I appeared before its predecessor committee on some occasions prior to the election as well. I agree with Willie Coffey’s comments about...
John Swinney SNP Chamber
15 Mar 2022
Covid-19: Scotland’s Strategic Framework
Those points have to be taken very seriously. They indicate the challenge that policymakers and decision makers face in enabling us to deal with a widespread public health emergency across our whole society, while taking approaches to address the specific circumstances of indi...
John Swinney SNP Chamber
22 Jun 2021
Coronavirus (Extension and Expiry) (Scotland) Bill: Stage 1
It is necessary for the arguments that I am setting out. A range of public services have experienced disruption as a consequence of Covid, and some of them would not be able to exercise their functions consistent with existing statute if we had not amended statute in the fashi...
The Deputy First Minister and Cabinet Secretary for Covid Recovery (John Swinney) SNP Chamber
31 Aug 2021
Scottish Government Priorities
On 26 May, the First Minister made a statement to Parliament outlining our ambitious programme to drive the nation’s recovery from the Covid crisis. Central to that programme would be the delivery of the commitments that we set out in our first steps plan during the election c...
John Swinney SNP Committee
18 Nov 2021
Ministerial Statements and Subordinate Legislation
I want to helpfully engage with Mr Whittle’s question, but I want to push back on one bit of the terminology that was used. Mr Whittle suggested that the Government was focusing on Covid rather than on other health conditions. I reject that as a characterisation of what the Go...
John Swinney SNP Committee
29 Apr 2020
“COVID-19—A Framework for Decision Making”
I am not trying to be difficult: we are trying to do both. We are trying to find a vaccine and we are trying to reduce the impact of Covid-19 as much as possible, in the absence of a vaccine. If that approach reduces the effects of Covid-19 to the point at which we are, in man...
The Deputy First Minister and Cabinet Secretary for Covid Recovery (John Swinney) SNP Chamber
07 Sep 2021
Programme for Government 2021-22
I welcome the opportunity to close the debate for the Government and I apologise for being unable to do so in person due to a requirement for Covid self-isolation. The annual programme for government debate stirs up a series of positive and negative reactions. We have heard m...
John Swinney SNP Committee
18 Nov 2021
Ministerial Statements and Subordinate Legislation
I think that it is a serious issue and it relates directly to some of the difficult judgments that the Government has made in reconciling the challenges of dealing with Covid with the wider challenges that dealing with Covid presents to the rest of society. The four harms fra...
John Swinney SNP Chamber
02 Dec 2021
Covid-19: Preparing for Winter and Priorities for Recovery
We have to take steps to ensure that the vaccination programme is available to individuals. I am certainly satisfied that we have comprehensive availability of vaccination venues in accessible locations. One of the questions that has been raised with us is on the possibility ...
John Swinney SNP Committee
13 Jan 2022
Ministerial Statement
I am in a slightly difficult position on that, because I am not the one making the big song and dance about that data. Mr Fraser set out to the committee that he has been demanding that information for a considerable time. The Government has to respond to demands for informati...
John Swinney SNP Committee
20 Jan 2022
Ministerial Statement, Coronavirus Acts Report and Subordinate Legislation
Essentially, that is reconciled through the four harms framework that I discussed in my answers to John Mason. I will remind the committee of the details of that. The Government has assessed the relationship between health harm directly from Covid, non-Covid health harm and ec...
The Deputy First Minister and Cabinet Secretary for Covid Recovery (John Swinney) SNP Chamber
09 Jun 2022
Covid-19 Inquiry
In this statement, I will update Parliament about the establishment of the Scottish Covid-19 inquiry. In particular, I will announce amendments to the inquiry’s terms of reference. Covid-19 has led to significant loss of life, resulting in heartache to all those who have los...
The Deputy First Minister and Cabinet Secretary for Covid Recovery (John Swinney) SNP Chamber
27 Oct 2022
Scottish Covid-19 Inquiry Chair
In this statement, I will update Parliament on matters relating to the Scottish Covid-19 inquiry. In particular, I will announce a new chair and an amendment that will be made to the inquiry’s terms of reference. I begin by repeating my condolences to those bereaved during th...
The Deputy First Minister and Cabinet Secretary for Covid Recovery (John Swinney) SNP Committee
19 Jan 2023
Budget Scrutiny 2023-24
Thank you, convener. I will make some brief opening remarks. I am grateful to the committee for the opportunity to discuss a number of matters that relate to the impact of the 2023-24 budget with regard to the Scottish Government’s Covid recovery strategy and the Covid-19 st...
John Swinney SNP Committee
29 Apr 2020
“COVID-19—A Framework for Decision Making”
The paper that we have constructed tries to properly and comprehensively tabulate the harms that Covid-19 causes. It sets out the four harms. The first is the direct health harm: the primary reason for the lockdown is the dangers that the virus poses to the population. We are ...
John Swinney SNP Committee
03 Dec 2020
Covid-19 Restrictions (Winter)
I will answer first. I want to reassure Monica Lennon and the committee that the Government, in its decision making a few weeks ago, carefully considered what I would call the medium term of Covid. We did not just take decisions about the next week or so; we were taking decisi...
The Deputy First Minister and Cabinet Secretary for Education and Skills (John Swinney) SNP Chamber
26 Jan 2021
Covid-19
I would like to update Parliament on the current position in relation to the Covid pandemic. I will not announce any changes to the current restrictions, but I will set out some additional support for students and outline our current thinking on issues such as travel restricti...
John Swinney SNP Chamber
09 Sep 2021
Covid-19 Vaccine Certification Scheme
A person who, for medical reasons, cannot be vaccinated will be able to apply for a document that says that they are exempt. Those who are on clinical trials should already have their exemption letter, and they will be able to show that instead of a record of vaccination. The...
John Swinney SNP Committee
16 Sep 2021
Ministerial Statement, Coronavirus Act Reports and Subordinate Legislation
The winter preparations started some time ago in order to ensure that we are ready for the pressures that are inevitably put on the health service during autumn and winter. Frankly, that is why the Government is taking some of the steps that we are taking. I accept that they a...
The Deputy First Minister and Cabinet Secretary for Covid Recovery (John Swinney) SNP Committee
04 Nov 2021
Ministerial Statement and Subordinate Legislation
I am grateful to the committee for the opportunity to discuss a number of matters, including the Covid update to Parliament from the Cabinet Secretary for Health and Social Care on Tuesday and the Covid recovery strategy. As set out in the update to Parliament, we continue to...
John Swinney SNP Committee
13 Jan 2022
Ministerial Statement
Mr Whittle raises legitimate points, which come back to points that I made in my previous answer. We must ensure that the needs of the population are met by the national health service. It is the fundamental founding commitment of the NHS that free treatment be provided at the...
The Deputy First Minister and Cabinet Secretary for Covid Recovery (John Swinney) SNP Committee
03 Feb 2022
Ministerial Statement and Subordinate Legislation
I am grateful to the committee for the opportunity to discuss the recent developments and updates to Parliament on Covid-19. As the First Minister set out on Tuesday, recent data continues to give grounds for optimism. The situation that we are now in is much less severe than...
John Swinney SNP Committee
29 Sep 2022
Pre-budget Scrutiny 2023-24
A lot of the thinking that needs to be done has, in fact, been done. It was largely done by the Christie commission all those years ago. I therefore do not think that we have a question to which we do not know the answer; I think that we do know the answer, and the answer revo...
The First Minister (John Swinney) SNP Chamber
06 Mar 2025
Covid-19 Day of Reflection
The annual day of reflection for Covid commemoration takes place this Sunday, 9 March. This year marks the fifth anniversary of the outbreak of the Covid-19 pandemic in Scotland and across the United Kingdom. This is a significant milestone, and I welcome the opportunity to ga...
John Swinney SNP Committee
29 Apr 2020
“COVID-19—A Framework for Decision Making”
Certainly, Mr Tomkins’s point that the R number is not low enough to give us comfort to start relaxing measures is a fair summary of the Government’s position. We need to see R reduce further and we hope that that will happen. As each day goes by, we see more encouraging infor...
John Swinney SNP Chamber
12 May 2020
Suppressing Covid: The Next Phase
I encourage Mr Wightman to read the first framework document, which went through all the issues about relative harms. Frankly, it is not good enough to cherry pick individual documents and say that there is something missing. The Government has put in place a suite of document...
The Deputy First Minister and Cabinet Secretary for Education and Skills (John Swinney) SNP Chamber
11 Aug 2020
Examination Results
The Covid pandemic has inflicted much suffering and hardship on our society. Many of our young people have had to face that pain across different aspects of their lives. I want to make it clear that I understand that anguish and I can see that, for some, the SQA results proces...
John Swinney SNP Chamber
18 Nov 2020
Safe Schools
The point that I was making was about the evidence that has emerged from the PCR—polymerase chain reaction—testing that is undertaken on children. It is indisputable evidence in relation to the way in which the testing regime operates and what it indicates about the prevalence...
The Deputy First Minister and Cabinet Secretary for Education and Skills (John Swinney) SNP Committee
03 Dec 2020
Covid-19 Restrictions (Winter)
Thank you for the opportunity to update the committee on the Scottish Government’s plans for, and approach to, managing the disruptions that will be caused to celebrations over the winter period as a result of Covid-19, and on the protective measures that are in place to suppr...
The Deputy First Minister and Cabinet Secretary for Covid Recovery (John Swinney) SNP Chamber
09 Sep 2021
Covid-19 Vaccine Certification Scheme
Throughout the Covid pandemic, the Scottish Government has taken actions that are proportionate to the nature and the circumstances of the challenges that we have faced. It is for that reason that we have brought forward for debate our proposal to introduce a mandatory domesti...
The Deputy First Minister and Cabinet Secretary for Covid Recovery (John Swinney) SNP Committee
16 Sep 2021
Ministerial Statement, Coronavirus Act Reports and Subordinate Legislation
Thank you, convener. I would like to make a brief opening statement in advance of the committee’s questions. I welcome this opportunity to update the committee on the measures that are being taken to ensure the necessary parliamentary oversight of the on-going response to the...
The Deputy First Minister and Cabinet Secretary for Covid Recovery (John Swinney) SNP Committee
30 Sep 2021
Ministerial Statement
Yes, I would, thank you, convener. I am grateful to the committee for the opportunity to appear before you once again. On Tuesday, the First Minister set out a number of Covid-related updates on the rules on international travel, and on promoting better ventilation, includin...
The Deputy First Minister and Cabinet Secretary for Covid Recovery (John Swinney) SNP Committee
18 Nov 2021
Ministerial Statements and Subordinate Legislation
Thank you, convener. I want to make some opening remarks to the committee and I am grateful for the opportunity to discuss a number of matters, including updates to the Parliament this week and last week on Covid-19. I set out in the recent ministerial statements to Parliamen...
John Swinney SNP Committee
18 Nov 2021
Ministerial Statements and Subordinate Legislation
The circumstances that Mr Fairlie recounts are deeply regrettable, but I am afraid that the burdens that are being wrestled with in the national health service make such examples a possible consequence of the pressures that we are facing in the health service. The health servi...
The Deputy First Minister and Cabinet Secretary for Covid Recovery (John Swinney) SNP Chamber
14 Dec 2021
Covid-19 (Public Inquiry)
Today I am announcing to Parliament the establishment of a statutory inquiry under the Inquiries Act 2005 to examine the handling of the Covid-19 pandemic in Scotland. At the outset of this statement, I acknowledge that Covid-19 has had, and continues to have, an enormous and ...
John Swinney SNP Committee
23 Dec 2021
Ministerial Statement and Subordinate Legislation
Professor Leitch has given the clinical and epidemiological underpinnings of this, but let me give the policy perspective as well, because Mr Whittle is absolutely correct in having the aspiration to be able to secure a recovery from Covid. 10:00 After consultation in the ...
The Deputy First Minister and Cabinet Secretary for Covid Recovery (John Swinney) SNP Committee
20 Jan 2022
Ministerial Statement, Coronavirus Acts Report and Subordinate Legislation
Thank you, convener. I am grateful to the committee for the opportunity to discuss a number of matters, including the updates to the Parliament on Covid-19. I will make a brief opening statement. As the First Minister set out on Tuesday, although omicron continues to cause hi...
John Swinney (Deputy First Minister and Cabinet Secretary for Covid Recovery) SNP Committee
24 Feb 2022
Ministerial Statement, Coronavirus Acts Reports and Subordinate Legislation
Thank you, convener. I am grateful for the opportunity to meet the committee, and I will make a brief opening statement. On Tuesday, the First Minister set out to the Parliament the revised strategic framework. The “Scotland’s Strategic Framework Update” document details the ...
John Swinney SNP Committee
24 Feb 2022
Ministerial Statement, Coronavirus Acts Reports and Subordinate Legislation
We have had discussions in this committee and across Parliament on countless occasions, and Mr Rowley has consistently questioned me on the impact on people of non-Covid health harms. Those questions are absolutely legitimate, and I would be the first to acknowledge that waiti...
John Swinney SNP Committee
17 Mar 2022
Ministerial Statement and Subordinate Legislation
There will always be a degree of waste—I suppose that there is no better word for it—in the vaccination programme. I think that we all accept that, and ministers have made it very clear that we want to minimise that. If memory serves, I think that the vaccination programme com...
The Deputy First Minister and Cabinet Secretary for Covid Recovery (John Swinney) SNP Chamber
27 Apr 2022
Portfolio Question Time · Covid-19 (Long Covid)
Our strategic framework update in February 2022 confirmed that on-going assessments of the Covid-19 threat will combine assessments of potential disease impact and the risk of infection. As well as covering current and expected infection fatality rates, the assessment of disea...
The Deputy First Minister and Cabinet Secretary for Covid Recovery (John Swinney) SNP Chamber
28 Jun 2022
Coronavirus (Recovery and Reform) (Scotland) Bill
I am pleased to open the final debate on this important bill. I would like to thank the conveners, members and clerks of the COVID-19 Recovery Committee, the Criminal Justice Committee, the Local Government, Housing and Planning Committee, the Delegated Powers and Law Reform C...
The Deputy First Minister and Cabinet Secretary for Covid Recovery (John Swinney) SNP Committee
29 Sep 2022
Pre-budget Scrutiny 2023-24
Thank you, convener. I am grateful to the committee for this opportunity to discuss a number of matters relating to our recovery from the Covid-19 pandemic and our preparedness for any future waves. In February 2022, the Scottish Government published a revised strategic frame...
John Swinney SNP Committee
19 Jan 2023
Budget Scrutiny 2023-24
The data that you recorded about the loss of life in relation to Covid is very sobering and demonstrates the importance of taking all necessary measures that are appropriate in the context to protect the population against Covid. Obviously, the commitment that the Government ...
John Swinney SNP Committee
19 Jan 2023
Budget Scrutiny 2023-24
I agree about the importance of long Covid and supporting the recovery of individuals who experience it. However, I challenge Jackie Baillie on the point about a significant increase in economic inactivity, because that is not what the data says. Data that was published on Tue...
John Swinney SNP Committee
29 Apr 2020
“COVID-19—A Framework for Decision Making”
Over the past few weeks, the Government has engaged in very open communication around all aspects of Covid-19. I can think of only a small number of issues other than Covid-19 that the Government has dealt with, to be honest. I assure the committee of the Government’s commitm...
John Swinney SNP Chamber
12 May 2020
Suppressing Covid: The Next Phase
It is suggested that the R number is in a range from 0.7 to 1. On any given week when the assessment picture is put together, the number may well vary, which is why the statisticians encourage us to talk about a range and why the United Kingdom Government, on scientific advice...
John Swinney SNP Committee
28 May 2020
“COVID-19—framework for decision making: Scotland’s route map through and out of the crisis”
What I tried to cover in my opening is that the R number represents one element of the decision making that we will undertake as we consider the evidence. All the observations that you have made about the R number are fair. It is set within a range. It can be difficult to be a...
John Swinney SNP Committee
12 Jun 2020
School Education and Early Learning: Covid-19
The evidence about Covid is still growing, and the research that will allow us to understand its effects and its transmission is continuing. We have not reached a definitive answer to that question—the issue of transmission among children and young people is still being explor...
The Deputy First Minister and Cabinet Secretary for Education and Skills (John Swinney) SNP Chamber
16 Jul 2020
Care Promise
The independent care review published its findings on 5 February and, in her statement to Parliament accepting those findings, the First Minister gave a commitment to update Parliament on progress with next steps. I do so today. Although the Covid-19 emergency response has ha...
The Deputy First Minister and Cabinet Secretary for Education and Skills (John Swinney) SNP Chamber
23 Jul 2020
Progress Towards Reopening Schools
On 23 June, I confirmed to Parliament that the collective efforts of the people of Scotland to suppress coronavirus had enabled us to bring forward our plans to reopen schools, with the aim that they should be open to all pupils on a full-time basis from August. Since then, w...
The Deputy First Minister and Cabinet Secretary for Education and Skills (John Swinney) SNP Committee
27 Jul 2020
School Education and Early Learning: Covid-19
On Thursday last week, I made a detailed statement to Parliament in which I outlined the progress that we have made towards fully reopening schools in August, and I set out how we are working with partners to address the wider impacts of the virus on the health and wellbeing, ...
John Swinney SNP Committee
27 Jul 2020
School Education and Early Learning: Covid-19
The examples that Mr Greene mentioned are measurements of the prevalence of Covid in our community, and that prevalence is uppermost in the Government’s mind. We have seen a sustained reduction in the prevalence of Covid, which led to my announcement on 23 June that it was pos...
John Swinney SNP Committee
30 Sep 2020
Covid-19 Framework for Decision Making and Scotland’s Route Map
Throughout our discussions on the pandemic, our approach has sought to address the four harms that we identified in the framework back in May. Within the framework is the whole question of economic harm to individuals and businesses. We make an assessment based on what it is p...
John Swinney SNP Committee
02 Sep 2021
Scotland’s Strategic Framework
It is important that we constantly revisit the messaging on the whole issue of Covid to ensure that it is achieving its purpose. I think that, in general, over the course of the pandemic, Government communications have been very effective and very focused in getting the messag...
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Chamber

Meeting of the Parliament (Hybrid) 09 November 2021

09 Nov 2021 · S6 · Meeting of the Parliament
Item of business
Covid-19
Swinney, John SNP Perthshire North Watch on SPTV

I will provide the update on the latest Covid-19 situation, on behalf of the First Minister. In giving the update, I will provide an assessment of the current course of the pandemic and our on-going consideration of how to respond; an update on the pressures on the national health service, looking ahead to the winter; a report on the progress that we are making to deliver the vaccination programme; an update on changes to international travel rules; and an update on the management of the risks of transmission at or around the 26th United Nations climate change conference of the parties—COP26.

First, though, I will report on the most recent statistics. Yesterday, 2,233 positive cases were reported, which is 12 per cent of all tests that were conducted. There are 753 people in hospital with Covid, which is 23 fewer than yesterday, and 57 people are receiving intensive care, which is four more than yesterday. Sadly, a further 20 deaths have been reported over the past 24 hours, which takes the total number of deaths registered under the definition to 9,313. I send my condolences to everyone who has lost a loved one during the pandemic.

More positively, the vaccination programme continues to make good progress. I confirm that 4,324,440 people have received a first dose, 3,918,528 have had both doses and 1,017,359 have received a booster vaccination or third primary vaccination. The vaccination programme is continuing at considerable pace. I am pleased to say that the United Kingdom Government’s Covid data dashboard confirms that our booster programme continues to be the best performing roll-out in the United Kingdom.

Today is also a major milestone in that programme, as we have reached 1 million Covid boosters and third doses, totalling 2 million doses of both Covid and flu vaccines. That is an amazing achievement and I thank everyone involved for their extraordinary efforts. It further demonstrates that the booster programme is performing exceptionally well.

In total, 88 per cent of the over-18 population is now fully vaccinated with two doses. That includes 99 per cent of the over-50s, 88 per cent of those aged 40 to 49, 77 per cent of 30 to 39-year-olds and 68 per cent of 18 to 29-year olds. In addition, 76 per cent of 16 and 17-year-olds and 55 per cent of 12 to 15-year-olds have had a first dose. For most people in those age groups, a single dose only is recommended at this stage.

After the most recent peak in new cases at around the start of September, the spread of the virus has not reduced to anything like the low levels that we had seen following the lockdowns. At slightly more than 2,500, the number of new cases each day is holding at a concerningly high level. The situation is precarious and unpredictable. If the previous pattern—characterised by waves of infection—is repeated, there is a risk that the spread of the virus could very quickly increase again during the coming weeks, perhaps over the Christmas period.

Starting from the current high level of infection in the community and the intense pressure that the NHS is already under as a result, some scenarios for what may happen next are very concerning. We need to avoid the most dangerous of those scenarios. There are also specific reasons to suspect that case numbers may increase in the weeks ahead: with the onset of colder winter weather, increased time spent indoors means that there will be more opportunities for Covid to circulate; COP26 has seen people from all over the world meet in Glasgow, which presents a known infection risk; and many of us will wish to spend time visiting loved ones over the festive period.

However, we are not yet able to predict with confidence what will happen next. We certainly want to avoid the sort of strict lockdowns that we saw before most of us were vaccinated. We do not want to repeat the sort of disruption to our daily lives, businesses and the economy that was required at earlier stages in the pandemic. However, we need to take appropriate measures to keep the pandemic under control.

It is because we want to avoid more difficult restrictions that we cannot rule out strengthening the baseline protective measures that are currently in place as the best way to head off any prospect of future lockdowns. Indeed, all Governments in the United Kingdom have said much the same—not least, for example, through the United Kingdom’s Government’s plan B.

We have been considering, for example, whether we may need to extend the Covid certification scheme to bring more settings into scope, such as indoor hospitality and leisure settings. Among other possible interventions, we are exploring how we can help improve ventilation, what we could do to increase home working and whether changes are needed to extend the use of face coverings. I stress, though, that we have not yet taken any decisions about strengthening the existing baseline measures and that we will discuss options with business sectors in the course of this week.

As members would expect, the Scottish Government has been exploring all options for how it will respond to the evolving situation.

We have been reviewing our strategic framework, which defines the Scottish Government’s overall approach to responding to the pandemic, and the next three-weekly review of the existing baseline measures will take place a week today. The First Minister, my Cabinet colleagues and I are, of course, watching the situation closely. We stand ready to respond at the right time, when the data indicates that that is necessary and proportionate.

The challenges that we currently face and the continuing spread of the virus mean that now is certainly not the time to relax our approach. We all need to redouble our efforts to adhere to the protective measures that are in place and to follow the guidance.

For that reason, I take this opportunity to reiterate the appeal that the First Minister, my Cabinet colleagues and others have been making to members of the public, to businesses, to transport providers and to organisations throughout Scotland. Please get vaccinated, including getting booster jabs and flu vaccinations if you are eligible. Please wear face coverings when it is required, ventilate indoor spaces where possible and wash your hands and surfaces regularly. Use lateral flow device tests regularly and book a polymerase chain reaction—PCR—test if a lateral flow test shows up positive, if you have symptoms of Covid or if you are identified as a close contact of someone who has tested positive. Please also continue to give contact details when you visit pubs and restaurants, and show your Covid certificate if you visit a venue where that is required. Also—this is critical—please continue to work from home whenever possible. The Government knows that none of that is easy. However, it is vital that those efforts continue.

The entire health and care system continues to be under considerable pressure. For many months, our health and social care services have been dealing with levels of demand that are usually experienced only in winter. Across the country, hospitals are at, or are close to, capacity. The social care system is also under pressure and is reporting an increase in the number of people who require care packages.

Indeed, the continuing high numbers of cases of Covid-19 mean that the pressure on our national health service is greater than it has been at any time in its 73-year history. As of today, Covid-related hospital occupancy—the number of patients in hospital with Covid—is 753, compared with 932 a week ago. Hospital admissions remain high, although they have decreased slightly. In the latest week, 585 people with Covid were admitted to hospital, compared with 687 in the first week of October. Admissions to intensive care units have also decreased slightly over the past month. NHS staff are dealing with significant numbers of Covid patients, alongside providing other patient care. They are also preparing for and responding to wider winter pressures, and are dealing with the backlog of care that built up in earlier stages of the pandemic.

As I have set out, there is a real risk that the pressure on the national health service could intensify further during the weeks and months ahead, including as we enter the winter flu season. The Scottish Government is working closely with health boards as they deal with those pressures. Last week, the Cabinet Secretary for Health and Social Care set out the measures that we are taking to support the NHS in preparing for and responding to the pressures now and the challenges that lie ahead.

As we know, vaccination has proved to be one of our most effective public health interventions against the pandemic. The first phase of the programme delivered more than 8 million Covid-19 vaccinations in 10 months. With Covid boosters, flu vaccines and jabs for new groups, we now need to deliver roughly the same number of vaccines—7.5 million—by early next year.

The vaccination programme is continuing at considerable pace. We have now administered, in total, more than 1 million boosters and third doses. We are, nonetheless, continuing to explore how we might increase capacity further, for example by establishing additional clinics, particularly at evenings and weekends.

We are confident that the programme remains on track. We are now sending letters to people aged 60 to 69 and to people with underlying health conditions to invite them to appointments at local community clinics, which will run throughout November. We will then, from mid-November, launch the online self-booking portal for adults aged 50 and over, people aged over 16 who are unpaid carers, and household contacts of immunosuppressed individuals, with the aim of offering vaccines to everyone over 50 by early next year.

Vaccination has been a huge job for the national health service. I again offer our thanks to the national health service staff who are working tirelessly to help keep us safe.

I also take this opportunity to reiterate our thanks to the armed forces for agreeing to support our vaccination effort by complementing our existing workforce. We have asked the people of Scotland to help us to deliver the vaccination programme by attending appointments where possible and rescheduling when that is necessary. By being vaccinated and having a booster vaccination, we can protect each other and help the national health service through what will be another exceptionally busy winter period.

I turn to international travel. Colleagues will be aware that the UK Government yesterday announced a change to international travel rules for England and recognised a wider range of vaccines. The Scottish Government will also make that change to regulations for arrivals here. With effect from Monday 22 November, we will recognise vaccines that are on the World Health Organization’s emergency-use list, as well as those that are approved in the UK by the Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency. The additional vaccines are Sinopharm and Sinovac, which are manufactured in China, and Covaxin, which is manufactured in India. Travellers who have been vaccinated with those products will be eligible for quarantine-free travel if they have a certificate of vaccination status from a country that is listed in our regulations and meets the data and security standards that are required at the UK border.

There are now more than 130 countries whose vaccine certificates we recognise, although China is not yet on that list. There is a process of engagement that is led by the Foreign Office to work with international partners so that we can bring more countries in scope as soon as possible, when we are satisfied that it is safe and secure to do so. Further announcements on that matter will be made on a four-nations basis. In addition, we will simplify rules for children under 18. All children, whether or not they are fully vaccinated, will now follow the rules for eligible vaccinated travellers. That means a test on day 2 after arrival, but no isolation and no test before departure or on day 8.

My final update today relates to the 26th United Nations climate change conference of the parties—COP26—in Glasgow. The summit is one of the most important gatherings of the century so far, and the Scottish Government has been doing everything that it can do to make it a success. We have been working closely with the UK Government and with partners in Scotland, including Glasgow City Council, Transport Scotland, NHS Scotland and Police Scotland, to ensure that the summit is delivered safely.

Covid-19 has presented significant challenges to staging this unique event. The scale and worldwide draw of COP26 poses the risk of spread of Covid-19, both among delegates and to or from the local population of Scotland and the UK. A comprehensive and exceptional package of mitigation measures has been in place to ensure that the event is delivered safely, which is helping to protect the welfare of everyone who is involved and the wider community. In addition to vaccination, measures include a robust testing regime, contact tracing, hygiene measures and ventilation.

Of course, although public health measures can mitigate the spread of Covid-19 to an extent, there remains a risk that COP26 could increase the spread of the virus. That is why Covid-19 continues to be closely monitored by all relevant agencies, and why the Scottish Government is closely involved in operational decisions during the event. As of 5 November, the cumulative test positivity results for blue zone pass holders, based on lateral flow tests, was around 0.1 per cent. However, we have only just passed the midpoint of the conference and we continue to monitor the situation carefully. We will provide a further update following the conclusion of COP26, unless there is a need to do so sooner.

The successful roll-out of the vaccination programme has been enabling us to live with far fewer restrictions and mitigations in place than were necessary a few short months ago. However, case numbers remain high and, looking ahead to the winter months, there is a real risk that they might increase again. Still, each week, hundreds of people are being admitted to hospital with Covid, and our NHS is under intense pressure.

Covid remains a threat, so we all need to play our part in keeping the virus under control. For that reason, I make no apologies for repeating the three things that we can all do to help to protect each other. First, I ask everyone who is eligible, but has not yet done so, to get vaccinated. That includes going for a booster jab. It is never too late to get vaccinated and it remains the single most important thing that any of us can do to protect ourselves and the people around us.

Secondly, I ask everyone to take regular LFD tests. Testing kits can be ordered through the NHS Inform website or collected from a local test site or pharmacy. Anyone who tests positive, who is identified as a close contact or who has symptoms of the virus should self-isolate and book a PCR test.

Thirdly, I ask everyone to comply with the mitigations that are still in place. People should work from home when possible, wear face coverings in indoor public places such as shops and public transport and when moving about in hospitality settings, and wash hands and surfaces thoroughly.

People should also meet outdoors if they can. I know that that will be increasingly difficult as we get deeper into winter, but outdoor environments are safer. When people meet indoors, they should open windows; anything that improves ventilation will help. People should also try, where possible, to keep a safe distance from people in other households.

Those precautions make a crucial difference. They will protect individuals and the people around us all, and they will help to ease the burden on our NHS.

I express once again the Scottish Government’s thanks to everyone in Scotland for what they are doing to help to protect each other, and I encourage people to continue to take the steps that are necessary to ensure that we all remain safe.

In the same item of business

The Presiding Officer (Alison Johnstone) NPA
The next item of business is a statement by John Swinney on a Covid-19 update. The Deputy First Minister will take questions at the end of his statement, so ...
The Deputy First Minister and Cabinet Secretary for Covid Recovery (John Swinney) SNP
I will provide the update on the latest Covid-19 situation, on behalf of the First Minister. In giving the update, I will provide an assessment of the curren...
The Presiding Officer NPA
The Deputy First Minister will now take questions on the issues that were raised in his statement. I intend to allow around 40 minutes for questions.
Douglas Ross (Highlands and Islands) (Con) Con
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John Swinney SNP
I thank Douglas Ross for his welcome of the progress on the booster vaccination programme. It is important that we acknowledge the significant landmark that ...
Daniel Johnson (Edinburgh Southern) (Lab) Lab
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John Swinney SNP
I have stressed in the remarks that I have made to Parliament today that the Government has to be open with the public about what steps we are considering. M...
Alex Cole-Hamilton (Edinburgh Western) (LD) LD
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John Swinney SNP
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The Presiding Officer NPA
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John Swinney SNP
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John Mason (Glasgow Shettleston) (SNP) SNP
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John Swinney SNP
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Rachael Hamilton (Ettrick, Roxburgh and Berwickshire) (Con) Con
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John Swinney SNP
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Christine Grahame (Midlothian South, Tweeddale and Lauderdale) (SNP) SNP
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John Swinney SNP
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Paul O’Kane (West Scotland) (Lab) Lab
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John Swinney SNP
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Willie Coffey (Kilmarnock and Irvine Valley) (SNP) SNP
Is the Deputy First Minister aware that many young adults who have recently turned 18 and are now eligible for their double vaccination are losing out financ...
John Swinney SNP
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Donald Cameron (Highlands and Islands) (Con) Con
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John Swinney SNP
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Stephanie Callaghan (Uddingston and Bellshill) (SNP) SNP
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John Swinney SNP
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Gillian Mackay (Central Scotland) (Green) Green
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John Swinney SNP
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Clare Adamson (Motherwell and Wishaw) (SNP) SNP
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John Swinney SNP
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Pam Duncan-Glancy (Glasgow) (Lab) Lab
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