Covid: Self-isolation 'should continue' after Wales laws lift

Getty Images A woman wearing a facemask in Cardiff city centre during coronavirus outbreak, 2020Getty Images
People are being advised to continue to use face masks even when laws are lifted in Wales

People should continue to isolate if they have Covid symptoms and use face masks even when legal restrictions are lifted, according to a health expert.

Legal rules on wearing masks and self-isolation are set to end this month.

But Public Health Wales' Dr Giri Shankar said there is a "risk people might confuse the ending of legal restrictions as the same as ending of medical requirements".

He said people should self isolate if they test positive or have symptoms.

First Minister Mark Drakeford has also previously said people would be advised to wear face masks when coronavirus laws are expected to go by 28 March.

Covid-19 infections are continuing to increase in Wales, according to Office for National Statistics (ONS), with one in 25 people estimated to have had the virus in the latest week.

Dr Shankar said: "It is about shifting the responsibility for individual customised protective behaviours.

"As a baseline measure, we still think a number of those measures should still continue such as hand hygiene, compliance with vaccination where possible, adhering to face coverings, and most importantly, when people have symptoms, they should still come forward and take a test.

"If they are symptomatic or test positive, they should still continue to self isolate, though not the legal requirement mandates it," he told BBC Radio Wales' Sunday Supplement.

Getty Images Covid testGetty Images
Free lateral flow tests will end from June in Wales but firms want them retained for longer

Dr Shankar said a "cultural shift is absolutely necessary" in terms of people going to work when feeling unwell.

"Economic drivers are far more compelling for people and the culture of presenteeism, despite symptoms, is something that we need to look at," he said.

"That's something that we see quite a bit in the NHS and social care system also... conscientious professionals take it upon themselves to be present at work, even when they are not severely unwell, but with some mild symptoms."

Free lateral flow tests (LFTs) will end from June in Wales, prompting leading business group CBI Wales to call for them to be used "throughout the year" before being phased out.

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