AN EXERCISE simulating a coronavirus outbreak in Scotland, which was shared with a UK government advisory group in 2018, showed a ‘clear gap’ in preparedness, the BBC has learned.
A report into ‘Exercise Iris’ revealed frontline staff ‘unease’ over personal protective equipment and ‘the need for substantive progress’.
The exercise simulated an outbreak of Middle East Respiratory Syndrome.
The Scottish government says its findings were shared with attendees.
Middle East Respiratory Syndrome (MERS-CoV) is a coronavirus like SARS-Cov-2 but has different characteristics.
Like the novel coronavirus, MERS-CoV causes a respiratory disease and key symptoms include fever and a cough. However, transmission rates are believed to be far lower and fatality rates are much higher.
BBC News learned an exercise was undertaken simulating an outbreak of the disease in 2018 and requested the findings under the Freedom of Information Act in April.
The Scottish Government has now published a report of its findings.
The outcomes were shared with the expert committee that advises the UK government on pandemics, the New and Emerging Respiratory Virus Threats Advisory Group (Nervtag) in June 2019.
‘Exercise Iris’ was a tabletop exercise which took place at a hotel in Stirling on 12 March 2018 and involved health boards, Health Protection Scotland, the Scottish Ambulance Service and NHS 24, the telephone advice service.
Exercise discussions revealed concerns around the availability of personal protective equipment (PPE) and underlined ‘the need for substantive progress on PPE use within Scotland’, according to the report.
‘Issues around PPE are not unique to a MERS-CoV outbreak,’ it said.
The report’s conclusions also note an ‘unease’ amongst frontline staff over the lack of clarity on PPE availability, training and testing, adding: ‘This is a clear gap in Scotland’s preparedness for MERS-CoV and other outbreaks and needs to be addressed as soon as possible.’
The report also warns of the demands of contact tracing.
One scenario in the exercise features ‘escalating resource requirements for contact tracing and follow up’. As a result, health boards were asked to consider the impact of extensive contact tracing.
‘It feels like a lost opportunity,’ says Professor Devi Sridhar, chair of public health at Edinburgh University and a member of the Scottish Government Covid-19 Advisory Group.
‘On the positive side, it’s good that these exercises were conducted, because it meant that they were thinking beyond flu, they were thinking about coronaviruses.
‘But on the negative side, it’s surprising. It seems that SAGE (Scientific Advisory Group for Emergencies) members were unaware or at least didn’t discuss this exercise in their thinking in January or February, which would have been crucial in making steps to actually prepare for an eventual outbreak.’
‘It’s the whole purpose of these exercises, to learn from them’, she added.
A report detailing the findings of an exercise simulating pandemic influenza called ‘Exercise Cygnus’, which was run in England in October 2016, concluded that the NHS would not be able to cope with a pandemic.
This was also not published. The goverment ignored the findings and instead conducted a contract war with the junior doctors.
The UK is second only to the USA in the number of coronavirus deaths.
The US has 110,000 the UK over 50,000.