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COMMENT: News of Covid cases among pupils so soon after schools reopened was the news parents dreaded

Parents drop off their children at Newhill Primary, Blairgowrie.
Parents drop off their children at Newhill Primary, Blairgowrie.

Parents across Courier Country had mixed feelings as they sent their children back to school last week.

While some were determined there must be a full return, a few were so anxious about the risk from Covid-19 that they decided to keep their children off.

Most were somewhere in the middle – eager that their children get the education they are entitled to and a return to some semblance of normality, yet anxious that they may be exposed to infection in the event of an outbreak.

So in just the fifth day of schools reopening the news that two Perthshire pupils and a person connected with a Dundee school have tested positive will have been the news many dreaded.

We all knew, with coronavirus still out there and likely to remain so for some time, that there would be cases diagnosed among pupils. But not, perhaps, so soon.

IN FULL: Dozens of classmates told to quarantine after two pupils at Perthshire schools test positive for Covid-19

Only last week, we published photographs and videos of smiling children eagerly walking through their school gates at last to be reunited with their friends and teachers.

Each and every one of more than 300 schools across Perth and Kinross, Dundee, Angus and Fife was risk assessed and detailed plans developed to minimise the risk of infection spreading.

Public health officials put processes in place ready to spring into action in the event of a case being reported connected to a school.

Now these plans and processes are being put to the test, with more than 40 people connected to the Perthshire schools told to isolate at home in an effort to prevent further infection.

The scientific advice on which the reopening of schools was based was the low infection rate among children and some evidence that children were less likely to pass the virus on.

Any evidence of transmission within schools – which so far there is not, either here or in clusters in Lanark and Glasgow – could put full-time schooling at risk and blended learning contingency plans may need to come into play.