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15 Jul 2022
The Scottish Government has clarified its guidance in relation to the role of Personal Protective Equipment (PPE) when it comes to vets and the NHS Test and Protect system.
As part of the clarification issued this week, when PPE such as visors, aprons, masks or gloves has been used in a veterinary setting, contact tracers will carry out individual risk assessments to decide whether the exposure risk is sufficient to require contacts to self-isolate.
When the contact tracing systems were introduced across the UK, the British Veterinary Association (BVA) raised concerns that veterinary practices could be forced to shut down due to the nature of veterinary work that means veterinary professionals cannot physically distance. This could have a significant impact on the provision of animal health and welfare services, particularly in an emergency, or where practices are located in remote and rural areas.
The clarification to the guidance comes after BVA raised the issue directly with Scottish Government ministers and Scotland’s Chief Veterinary Officer. It follows a similar move from Public Health England earlier in August, whereby contact tracers will carry out individual risk assessments based on PPE and other precautions if someone working in a veterinary setting in England is contacted under Test, Track and Trace measures or if they test positive for Covid-19.
What it will mean for vets in Scotland:
Commenting, BVA Scottish Branch President Kathleen Robertson said:
“We’re delighted that the Scottish Government has taken our members’ concerns on board and issued this helpful clarification to reflect the way that veterinary professionals are working during Covid-19 to keep themselves and their clients safe.
“I know that a lot of practices were extremely worried that if a team member was contact traced it could potentially force the whole practice to shut down for two weeks. This could be really detrimental to animal welfare and make things particularly challenging in remote areas, where there may not be neighbouring practices to call on for support.
“Veterinary professionals in Scotland should continue to take all precautions to mitigate against the spread of the virus including practising social distancing, washing hands regularly and wearing appropriate PPE.
“It’s fantastic that this guidance has now come into play in England and Scotland. BVA will continue to raise the issue in Wales and Northern Ireland and hope that a similar approach is taken.”
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