The Star Malaysia

Austrian ski resort has record rate of virus antibodies, study finds

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A study of residents in the Alpine ski resort of Ischgl, the site of Austria’s biggest coronaviru­s outbreak, has found 42% have antibodies for the virus, the highest rate ever proven, the university that carried out the study said.

Thousands of people were infected at the resort, which marketed itself as the “Ibiza of the Alps”, as the virus found a breeding ground in crowded apres-ski bars early in Austria’s outbreak.

The first positive test result in Ischgl was on March 7, days after Iceland alerted the Austrian authoritie­s to several of its nationals who it believed caught the coronaviru­s there.

A quarantine was declared a week later but tourists were allowed to leave, further spreading the virus across Europe.

“The seropreval­ence of study participan­ts from Ischgl is 42.4%,” the director of the Medical University of Innsbruck’s Institute of Virology, Dorothee von Laer, who led the study, said yesterday.

“We are dealing in Ischgl with the highest seropreval­ence ever proven in a study. Even though at that rate herd immunity cannot be assumed, Ischgl’s population should be protected (from the virus) to a large extent,” she added.

Seropreval­ence is the number of people in a population who test positive for a specific disease based on blood serum specimens.

Other studies have found antibody rates of 10% in Geneva and 27% in Italy’s Alpine valley of Val Gardena, the university said.

Antibody and regular so-called PCR tests were carried out on 1,473 people, or 79% of Ischgl’s inhabitant­s, between April 21 and 27. Only 15% of those found to have antibodies had previously tested positive for the virus, the university said.

Despite the Ischgl outbreak, Austria has one of western Europe’s lowest infection rates.

It introduced a national lockdown in mid-March, which flattened its curve of infections, and it started loosening that lockdown a month later.

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