Business Day

Mass screening a smart move

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Last week’s announceme­nt by President Cyril Ramaphosa to deploy a 10,000-strong force of fieldworke­rs to visit homes across the country to screen people for symptoms of Covid-19, a respirator­y disease caused by the SARS-CoV-2 coronaviru­s, is welcome news.

The field workers will send those with signs of the illness for testing at local hospitals and mobile testing labs. People found to be positive with mild symptoms will be quarantine­d either at home or in government facilities, and those who are seriously ill will be hospitalis­ed.

Alongside the stay-at-home order, which entered its second week on Friday, and social distancing guidelines, testing should be at the heart of the efforts to contain and control the pandemic, say epidemiolo­gists.

We agree.

On Sunday, the number of people infected by the virus, traced to China’s central province of Hubei in December 2019, topped 1.2-million, according to data compiled by Johns Hopkins University in the US. Though SA accounted for less than 1% of that total with nearly 1,600 confirmed cases, the country remains the hardest hit in sub-Saharan Africa.

South Korea is perhaps the most striking example of how a combinatio­n of social distancing and efforts to test as many people as possible should be the backbone of any plan to bring the pandemic under control. South Korea quickly slowed the rate of new infections thanks to mass testing at clinics, hospitals and in unorthodox places such as drive- and walk-through booths.

Even as China emerges from one of the biggest human lockdowns in history and eases restrictio­ns on movement, testing remains an important aspect of its efforts to keep the virus suppressed. As the numbers of patients have plummeted, temporary hospitals have closed, but isolation wards and quarantine sites remain open, internatio­nal travellers face mandatory quarantine periods, and testing labs are still running.

No wonder the World Health Organisati­on (WHO) is pleading with every country to include testing in any measures to fight the pandemic. “We have a simple message for all countries: test, test, test,” Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s, director-general of the WHO, told a virtual media conference last week.

The reasons for large-scale testing are straightfo­rward. First, Ramaphosa’s Covid-19 command team can easily identify those with the disease, isolate them and get them medical care. The other purpose is for the team led by health minister Zweli Mkhize, who has been consistent­ly telling South Africans that the current rate of infections is the “calm before a heavy and devastatin­g storm”, to have a better idea of the prevalence of the disease.

To date SA has tested nearly 50,000 people. That the bulk of those cases have been done in private labs suggests that the National Health Laboratory Service has not exactly swung into action. In a statement posted on its website, the government agency expects to process about 36,000 tests a day by the end of April.

It is also good to hear the team has approached cellphone companies to help identify, trace and test every person an infected person has interacted with. Even if that job could be done effectivel­y, our hospitals will be overrun by those needing care, and 37 quarantine sites will prove inadequate when the virus runs amok. And self-quarantini­ng at home will be a sad joke for most South Africans, whose shacks are barely a metre apart in squatter camps, while government-subsidised RDP houses end up being home to more people than they are intended to be.

There’s a lot we don’t know about how the trajectory of the epidemic will unfold and the toll it will take on human life and the economy, but we fully agree with epidemiolo­gists that large-scale testing, isolation and contact tracing can mean the difference between suppressin­g the outbreak and losing control.

RAMAPHOSA’S COVID-19 COMMAND TEAM CAN EASILY IDENTITY THOSE WITH THE DISEASE

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