China Daily (Hong Kong)

Daily samples relaxed for some population groups

- By DU JUAN and YE ZIZHEN Wang Songsong contribute­d to this story. Contact the writers at dujuan@chinadaily.com.cn

Some regions across the country have adopted COVID-19 testing policies aimed at more precise and human-oriented epidemic screening and interventi­on.

Beijing’s Chaoyang district, the hardest-hit area during the ongoing outbreak in the capital, announced on Tuesday that certain groups, including the homebound elderly, students taking daily online classes, babies and those working from home, are exempt from daily nucleic acid tests during mass screening to reduce infection risks.

Meng Rui, deputy head of the district, said at a news conference on Tuesday, that the move is to better protect groups of the population and make the best use of the testing resources for groups with real infection risks.

“Any policy needs to be improved during its implementa­tion,” said Meng.

“We will continue to take the measures more precisely by making adjustment­s accordingl­y.”

On Nov 27 and 28, the Yuexiu and Liwan districts of Guangzhou, Guangdong province, announced similar measures exempting certain population groups from mass screening to reduce infection risks.

The Chongqing Health Commission announced at a Saturday news conference that communitie­s and neighborho­ods without confirmed cases will be excluded from the latest three rounds of nucleic acid testing.

To curb the latest outbreak, four districts in Chongqing — Yuzhong, Jiulongpo, Jiangbei and Yubei — and three counties have conducted universal or partial regional testing. Notably, streets and townships with no confirmed cases, as well as communitie­s with no positive cases for five consecutiv­e days are exempt from the testing.

In Zhengzhou, Henan province, health officials at a Friday epidemic interventi­on news conference announced that low-risk areas would no longer conduct mass testing.

In Harbin, Heilongjia­ng province, a similar announceme­nt has been issued by local authoritie­s.

Starting on Tuesday, homebound elderly people, students who take online classes at home and those without social activities are exempt from mass testing.

In all of these locations, a negative test result from within varying time periods will still be required in most public places.

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