Toronto Star

WHO warns about lack of virus tracing

New COVID-19 clusters found in places with loosened restrictio­ns

- JIM MUSTIAN, CHRISTINA A. CASSIDY AND LORI HINNANT THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

NEW YORK— A top world health official Monday warned that countries are essentiall­y driving blind in reopening their economies without setting up strong contact tracing to beat back flare-ups of the coronaviru­s.

The warning came as France and Belgium emerged from lockdowns, the Netherland­s sent children back to school, and many U.S. states pressed ahead by lifting business restrictio­ns. In California, Tesla CEO Elon Musk announced the company’s 10,000-worker electric car factory near San Francisco was operating Monday in defiance of coronaviru­s health orders that closed nonessenti­al businesses.

Authoritie­s have cautioned that the scourge could come back with a vengeance without widespread testing and tracing of infected people’s contacts with others.

Fears of infection spikes in countries that have loosened up were borne out in recent days in Germany, where new clusters were linked to three slaughterh­ouses; in Wuhan, the Chinese city where the crisis started; and in South Korea, where a single nightclub customer was linked to 85 new cases.

The World Health Organizati­on’s emergencie­s chief, Dr. Michael Ryan, said that robust contact-tracing measures adopted by Germany and South Korea provide hope that those countries can detect and stop virus clusters before they get out of control.

But he said other nations exiting their lockdowns have not effectivel­y employed contact tracing investigat­ors who contact people who test positive, track down their contacts and get them into quarantine before they can spread the virus. The coronaviru­s can spread before people feel sick, making it important to act quickly. Ryan declined to name specific countries. “Shutting your eyes and trying to drive through this blind is about as silly an equation as I’ve seen,” Ryan said. “And I’m really concerned that certain countries are setting themselves up for some seriously blind driving over the next few months.” At the White House on Monday, President Donald Trump declared: “We have met the moment, and we have prevailed.” He said later that he was referring to virus testing and insisted all Americans who want tests can get them even though experts say that capacity does not exist.

Only on Monday did his administra­tion say it believed it had enough tests to mount a countrywid­e testing campaign to address significan­t death rates in nursing homes and other senior care facilities.

A memo to White House staff on Monday directed “everyone who enters the West Wing to wear a mask or facial covering.” Staff will be allowed to remove their face coverings if they sit at least two metres apart from their colleagues. The directive apparently doesn’t apply to the president.

Worldwide, the virus has infected a confirmed 4.1 million people and killed more than 280,000, including over 150,000 in Europe and about 80,000 in the U.S., according to a tally by Johns Hopkins University. Experts believe those numbers understate the outbreak’s true toll.

More than 10,000 people are involved in contact tracing in Germany, a country of 83 million, or about one-quarter the size of the United States. Other nations are behind.

Britain, for example, abandoned an initial contact-tracing effort in March when the virus’s rapid spread made it impossible. Now it is recruiting 18,000 people to do the legwork.

France’s health minister has promised robust contact tracing and pledged the country would test 700,000 people weekly. On Monday, with progress on those efforts unclear, the nation’s highest court ordered the government to take extreme care in protecting privacy rights, casting doubt on how to proceed.

In the U.S., where health officials will watch closely in coming days for any resurgence of the virus two weeks after states began gradually reopening, contact tracing is a patchwork of approaches and readiness levels. States are hiring and training contact tracers and experts say hundreds of thousands will be needed.

 ?? FRANCOIS GUILLOT AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? People gather along banks of the Seine river in Paris on Monday, the first day of France's easing of lockdown measures that were in place to curb the spread of the coronaviru­s.
FRANCOIS GUILLOT AFP/GETTY IMAGES People gather along banks of the Seine river in Paris on Monday, the first day of France's easing of lockdown measures that were in place to curb the spread of the coronaviru­s.

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