Fiji Sun

Hong Kong Starts Universal COVID-19 Screening to Stop Spread of Pandemic

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Hong Kong launched its massive screening programme on Tuesday to help curb the spread of COVID-19 and restore the normal lives of residents.

From temperatur­e checks to sample collection, it took Lee merely 10 minutes to finish the testing on Tuesday morning at a testing station in Sai Wan Ho Sports Centre. “Of course people should take the test. The more people join the programme, the more asymptomat­ic patients will be identified,” Lee said.

Lee was among some 82,000 people, who had been tested by 5pm local time under the Universal Community Testing Programme (UCTP) initiated by the Hong Kong Special Administra­tive Region (HKSAR) Government, which has seen preregistr­ation of over 650,000.

The voluntary, free testing will last for seven days and can be prolonged to no more than two weeks.

Hong Kong chief makes plea

Chief executive of the HKSAR Carrie Lam urged the public to actively join UCTP at a press briefing ahead of an Executive Council meeting on Tuesday morning. After getting tested herself, Lam described the sample collection process as simple, safe and fast. A total of 141 community testing centres have been put into opera

tion across Hong Kong.

Among participan­ts on the first day, public health experts Gabriel Leung and David Hui took the virus tests at Yuen Wo Road Sports Center in Sha Tin.

To ensure a smooth programme, the HKSAR Government has mobilised some 4000 civil servants to provide assistance, and nearly 6000 medical workers have also volunteere­d to help.

The samples will be sent to the Fire Eye Laboratory at Sun Yat Sen Memorial Park Sports Centre that is capable of dealing with at least 300,000 samples a day.

A Hong Kong resident surnamed Wong said she did not worry about privacy leakage as the Government had adopted enough precaution­s.

The HKSAR Government has said the personal informatio­n of participan­ts will not be transferre­d out of Hong Kong and will be eliminated in a month after the programme ends.

“Taking the test is responsibl­e for both me and other people,”

Wong said.

Mass testing important

Ms Lam explained the necessity of mass testing as nearly a quarter of the confirmed cases in Hong Kong involved asymptomat­ic patients, appealing to the public to view the testing programme objectivel­y and give it the greatest support.

As Hong Kong has paid a huge price with travel restrictio­ns and closures of commercial premises, the testing programme will help fight the epidemic and restore economic and social activities.

Chen Dong, deputy director of the Liaison Office of the Central People’s Government in the HKSAR, took the test along with other staff members of the liaison office on Tuesday. He said universal testing has proved to be an effective means to cut the transmissi­on chain according to the anti-epidemic experience of both the mainland and overseas.

Tung Chee-hwa, vice chairman of the National Committee of the Chinese People’s Political Consultati­ve Conference, also took the test on Tuesday morning and urged more people to participat­e in the programme for the benefit of Hong Kong.

Hong Kong witnessed a resurgence of COVID-19 cases from early July and the situation has eased recently after a series of control measures by the HKSAR Government. Hong Kong reported 12 new cases on Tuesday, with nine local infections.

 ??  ?? People wearing face masks queue for the coronaviru­s test outside a testing centre in Hong Kong on September 1, 2020.
People wearing face masks queue for the coronaviru­s test outside a testing centre in Hong Kong on September 1, 2020.

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