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Daily Record
Daily Record
National
Katrine Bussey & Tara Fitzpatrick

Scots Health Secretary quizzed on 'major outbreak' of coronavirus at Glasgow hospital

The Scottish Health Secretary has said she will reveal the number of hospital wards shut down as a result of Covid-19.

Jeane Freeman made the announcement after being pressed on a "major outbreak" of the disease inside a Glasgow hospital.

Labour’s health spokeswoman Monica Lennon called for action as she questioned Ms Freeman about the “worrying reports” which emerged from Glasgow’s Gartnavel Hospital.

Ms Lennon raised the issue in the Scottish Parliament with reference to a Scots family who lost a loved one in the hospital after he tested negative for the virus.

Jeane Freeman made the announcement after being pressed on a 'major outbreak' (Getty Images)

She said: "Families affected by the outbreak have shared heart-breaking accounts of the loss of loved ones.

"David Holgate's family were told he would be safe at Gartnavel.

"After being admitted to the hospital, Mr Holgate tested negative for Covid, he was however later struck down by the virus and died in the hospital alone.

"His daughter has said the 'virus blew through the hospital like a draught'."

Papers from the health board, NHS Greater Glasgow and Clyde, confirm “over 20 ward closures occurred across March and April this year" in the area because of coronavirus.

Ms Lennon asked Ms Freeman how many wards across Scotland had been shut down by outbreaks of the disease during the pandemic.

The Health Secretary said she did "not have the exact number in terms of the number of wards that were closed across all hospital settings" - but said she would " secure that number ".

She also expressed her sympathies to all those who had lost loved ones.

MSPs were also told the 14-day incubation period for Covid-19 meant it is very difficult to tell if someone was clear of the disease or not when they are admitted to hospital.

Ms Freeman said while a patient may "test negative at the point they are tested, that does not mean they are not incubating Covid-19".

The Health Secretary added: "The 14-day incubation period does make it absolutely difficult to be certain about these matters."

She said work was going on involving the Scottish Government, the other nations of the UK and the European Centre for Disease Prevention and Control to try to establish "international definitions for hospital-acquired Covid-19 infections" - cases where patients have caught the disease while being treated in hospital.

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