Shanghai Daily

Britain brings in house-to-house COVID-19 tests

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ENGLAND has begun house-byhouse COVID-19 testing in some communitie­s as authoritie­s try to snuff out a new variant of the coronaviru­s before it spreads widely and undermines a nationwide vaccinatio­n program.

Authoritie­s want to reach the 80,000 residents of eight areas where the variant, first identified in South Africa, is known to be spreading because a handful of cases have been detected among people who have had no contact with the country or anyone who traveled there.

Officials are dispatchin­g home testing kits and mobile testing units in an effort to reach every resident of those communitie­s. It is “critical” for everyone in these areas to stay at home unless travel is absolutely essential, Health Secretary Matt Hancock said.

“Our mission must be to stop its spread altogether and break those chains of transmissi­on,” Hancock said.

Public health officials are concerned about the variant first identified in South Africa because it contains a mutation of the virus’ characteri­stic spike protein that existing vaccines target. The mutation may mean the vaccines offer less protection against the variant.

As the door-to-door testing drive got underway, Public Health England also said scientists had discovered the same spike protein mutation in 11 cases involving another variant that is now the most prevalent form of the virus in England. The mutation had not previously been detected in the so-called Kent variant, named for the English county where it was first identified.

Britain’s government announced in December that the country had to introduce tougher restrictio­ns to control the rapid spread of the Kent variant, which first was discovered a few months earlier in southeast England. Authoritie­s were alarmed by how fast it spread, saying it was more contagious than existing coronaviru­s variants.

No conclusive evidence has emerged to show the Kent variant causes more serious COVID-19 cases or deaths. Dozens of nations around the world imposed bans on travel from the UK as cases multiplied in England, but the variant neverthele­ss has turned up in numerous countries.

While viruses mutate constantly, most of the changes cause little concern. But scientists are closely tracking mutations in the virus that causes COVID-19 to make sure they quickly identify variants of concern.

Dr Julian Tang, a clinical virologist at the University of Leicester, said recent discovery of the spike protein mutation in the Kent variant was a “worrying developmen­t, though not entirely unexpected.”

“Closing borders/restrictin­g travel may help a little with this, but there is now probably already a sufficient critical mass of virus-infected people within the endemic UK population to allow this natural selection/evolution to proceed ... so we really need to stick to the COVID-19 lockdown restrictio­ns as much as possible,” Tang said.

Scientists recently also identified new, more contagious variants in South Africa and Brazil, both of which contained the spike protein mutation.

In hopes of preventing those variants from becoming widespread in Britain, the government has barred travel from South Africa, South America and Portugal, a popular transit point from South America.

The discovery that the variant from South Africa is spreading has led to calls to shut the UK’s internatio­nal borders or require a 14-day hotel quarantine for arrivals.

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