Deccan Chronicle

UK in ‘last lap’ of Covid war, claims its foreign secretary Daily lateral flow tests to replace isolation of potential patients

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London, May 2: The UK is very close to turning the corner in its fight against the Coronaviru­s pandemic and it is important to remain careful in the last lap of the process, UK Foreign Secretary Dominic Raab said on Sunday.

The senior Cabinet minister was defending the government’s roadmap out of the lockdown, which is now set to ease further on May

17 when greater indoor interactio­ns are expected to be allowed, with June 21 set as the date for a near complete end to lockdown rules.

Some groups and businesses such as restaurant­s have called for a quicker lifting of restrictio­ns. “I know that people are hankering to go a bit faster but actually we feel vindicated at taking steady steps out of the lockdown is the smart way to go,” Raab told ‘Sky News'. “We’re very close now to really turning the corner and I think we still need to be careful to go as I said we don’t want to see the gains lost and the sacrifices that have been made undone. By the time we get to June 21 almost all social restrictio­ns will be lifted, so there's only a little bit more time to go but it's right we do that in a careful way,” the minister said.

“I do think we just need to make sure that in the last lap, if you like, that we are careful and we don’t lose the gains we’ve made,” he said. The minister also indicated that the government is looking at certain social distancing and other safeguards that would still be needed after June 21.

“We want to get to a position, at the end of June, where we can get life back as close to normal as possible, but they'll still need to be some safeguards in place,” he said.

According to some plans in the works, daily lateral flow tests could be used as an alternativ­e to isolation for those who have been in contact with someone who tests positive for the coronaviru­s. Currently, these people must quarantine for 10 days but a trial in England will see daily lateral flow tests given to as many as

40,000 people. Participan­ts in the trial will be sent a week's worth of tests and will be able to go about normal life as long as their daily results are negative. The trial could provide evidence that would reduce the length of time contacts of positive cases need to isolate.

“This new pilot could help shift the dial in our favour by offering a viable alternativ­e to selfisolat­ion for people who are contacts of positive

Covid-19 cases, and one that would allow people to carry on going to work and living their lives,” said UK Health Secretary Matt Hancock.

The trial will begin on May 9 and close contacts of people with Covid-19 will be contacted by phone and sent seven days of the tests if they decide to participat­e in the study. —

 ?? AP ?? Protesters pass a digital billboard urging people to respect the 1.5 metre social distancing guidelines during a demonstrat­ion against Coronaviru­s related restrictio­ns in Amsterdam, Netherland­s, on Sunday. —
AP Protesters pass a digital billboard urging people to respect the 1.5 metre social distancing guidelines during a demonstrat­ion against Coronaviru­s related restrictio­ns in Amsterdam, Netherland­s, on Sunday. —

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