Sunday People

HOLS TESTING HERE TO STAY

£30 bid to stop Covid mutants

- By Nigel Nelson POLITICAL EDITOR nigel.nelson@people.co.uk

COVID tests are to become a permanent fixture of foreign holidays to identify dangerous new variants entering Britain.

From the end of October doublejabb­ed travellers will be able to take £30 lateral flow tests instead of expensive PCRS.

Anyone with a positive result will need a confirmato­ry free PCR test which will be genomicall­y sequenced to find new variants.

But viral geneticist Aris Katzouraki­s, of Oxford University, warned the new system will not stop new and potentiall­y more lethal strains of Covid getting in.

He said PCR tests are better at tracking variants but without results until days after someone arrives in the UK the virus can still be spread.

University College London virologist Professor Deenan Pillay, a member of the Independen­t Sage advice group, said: “The way testing for return travellers has been set up is a complete disaster.

“It is important that testing continues but it should be undertaken by the NHS.”

Under the new system the double-jabbed will not have to take a lateral flow test three days before returning home, but two days after. Shadow Transport

Secretary Jim Mcmahon said: “PCR tests play a crucial role in identifyin­g variants. Ministers must set out exactly how they’ll continue this surveillan­ce.

“They must ensure we do not see a repeat of the failings that allowed the Delta variant to spread rapidly.” Yesterday the number of UK Covid-19 cases rose by 30,144 to 7,400,739, and deaths increased 164 to 135,147.

Government scientists have now sequenced more than

860,000 PCR tests – nearly a quarter of all those worldwide. This allows them to spot gene mutations in the virus and target areas where surge testing is needed

along with beefing up contact tracing. Health Secretary Sajid Javid said: “Every single test sequenced helps us to learn more about this awful virus and brings us a step closer to defeating it.”

That means overseas travellers and returning holidaymak­ers will need to continue testing unless Covid is eradicated globally.

Professor Sir Mark Caulfield, chief scientist for the Government’s Genomics England, said: “We’re in a race against the clock.”

And UK Health Security Agency chief executive Jenny Harries added that: “As we continue to a way of life that feels more familiar, sequencing genomes will become even more important.”

 ??  ?? STEP CLOSER: Minister Javid
STEP CLOSER: Minister Javid

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