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by Andrew Learmonth
08 February 2022
Nicola Sturgeon urged to scrap Test and Protect

Nicola Sturgeon urged to scrap Test and Protect

Nicola Sturgeon has been urged to scrap Scotland’s “increasingly redundant” Test and Protect contract tracing system.

The call comes from the Scottish Conservatives in their new roadmap on getting “back to normality” urging the government to take more targeted measures on tackling the virus.

The Tories say that the more transmissible Omicron variant and the move to lateral flows to diagnose a positive case means Test and Protect is “no longer an effective use of scarce NHS resources.”

Shadow health secretary, Dr Sandesh Gulhane, said the government should "adopt a new, more targeted approach to Covid."

He added: "We would place a higher emphasis on protecting vulnerable groups and trusting the public, instead of blanket restrictions such as mandating face masks in classrooms.

“One of the key proposals is replacing Test and Protect. It was incredibly useful in earlier stages of the pandemic but it has become increasingly redundant in recent months.”

He added: “We are nearing the point where Test and Protect is no longer an effective use of scarce NHS resources.

“As we start to move beyond the pandemic, our approach must adapt to fit the new situation.”

The Scottish Government has committed funding to keep Test and Protect in place until September.

The First Minister has previously said testing may be “one of the protections that we are likely to ask people to follow for longest, because it is such an important way of breaking chains of transmission."

On Monday, health secretary Humza Yousaf said Scotland was now through the worst of the Omicron variant.

On Sunday, 23 people were in intensive care with Covid-19, the lowest number since July, and 958 were in hospital, the fewest since early January.

He told the BBC’s Good Morning Scotland: “I think we’re through the worst of it. I definitely think the last few weeks of December and the first few weeks of January — that five to six-week period — was probably the worst and most intense period the health service has ever come under in its 73-year existence. That’s not coming from me, that’s coming from people who have been working there for decades and decades.”

Yousaf warned that there was still “significant pressure,” on the NHS.

“That pressure comes from the continued number of Covid patients — they’re just under 1,000, thankfully, who are in hospital with Covid.”

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