More on what life after lockdown will look like
Last updated 5th May 2020
Allowing some children to return to schools and relaxing rules on daily exercise and meeting friends are among the options being considered by the Scottish Government to ease lockdown measures.
First Minister Nicola Sturgeon revealed its Framework for Decision Making at her coronavirus briefing.
She said a total of 1,620 patients have now died in Scotland after testing positive for coronavirus, up 44 from 1,576 on Monday.
The First Minister said 12,437 people have tested positive for the virus in Scotland, up by 171 from 12,266 the day before.
There are 104 people in intensive care with coronavirus or coronavirus symptoms, an increase of five on Monday, while 1,656 people are in hospital with confirmed or suspected Covid-19, a decrease of 64.
Since March 5, 2,847 people who have tested positive for coronavirus have been able to leave hospital.
The First Minister said lifting the lockdown will not be like "flipping a switch'' but will instead be a gradual process.
Outlining numbers behind her reasoning, she said the R number - the number of people infected by each person who has the virus - is slightly higher in Scotland than the rest of the UK and an estimated 26,000 people are infectious.
She said the "best estimate'' is the R number is between 0.7 and one.
But she stressed: "We can't be sure it is not closer to one than 0.7.''
Ms Sturgeon said measures the Scottish Government are considering include:
- Changing advice on spending time outdoors to allow exercise more than once a day
- A slight relaxation of the rules to allow "meeting up with small defined groups'' of people, even if initially only outdoors
- Resuming some NHS and community care services
- Carefully, gradually and safely allowing businesses to reopen but insisting on home working where possible for the near future
- Allowing some children, such as those at transition points of education or studying for exams, to return to school
While Ms Sturgeon said ministers are working towards "careful and gradual changes'' to the lockdown restrictions, she also stressed this will only happen when we judge it is safe to make them, which I am afraid is not right now''.
With the current restrictions due to be reviewed on Thursday, Ms Sturgeon said it is "highly unlikely'' any significant changes will be made at this time.
She warned changes could "quickly see transmission of the virus increase again''.
The First Minister said charts based on data from Denmark show if Scotland was to fully reopen nurseries and primary schools now "the most likely scenario would be a resurgence in the virus which would overwhelm our hospital capacity in matter of weeks''.
Ms Sturgeon said: "The hard fact is we must see further restrictions in new cases, hospital and ICU admissions and deaths to be sure the overall level of infection and the R number are lower than they are now.
"That means for the moment we do need to stick with the current lockdown restrictions.''
She said the "severity of restrictions we are living under'' cannot continue indefinitely.
The First Minister also addressed when NHS services such as non-urgent operations and cancer screening programmes, could be resumed again.
"These postponements have implications for health, so we must consider how services can be restarted as soon as possible,'' she said.
Regarding the reopening of businesses, Ms Sturgeon stressed the need to work with companies and trade unions to "consider the practical arrangements for different work environments to start up safely''.
While she said the Scottish Govenrment was "looking carefully'' at what UK ministers are doing, she said they were also consulting with organisations north of the border.
"Initially we are giving particular consideration to businesses in the construction, retail and manufacturing sectors, and also to some outdoor and rural businesses,'' the First Minister said.
But she said where staff could work from home "we are very likely to insist on that for the forseeable future''.
A total of 1,620 patients have died in Scotland after testing positive for coronavirus, up by 44 from 1,576 on Monday, Nicola Sturgeon has said.
The First Minister said 12,437 people have now tested positive for the virus in Scotland, up by 171 from 12,266 the day before.
There are 104 people in intensive care with coronavirus or coronavirus symptoms, an increase of five on yesterday, she added.
There are 1,656 people in hospital with confirmed or suspected Covid-19, a decrease of 64.
Since March 5, 2,847 people who have tested positive for coronavirus have been able to leave hospital.