The Sunday Telegraph

Lack of tests for medics ‘causes outbreaks’

Experts call for weekly testing of healthcare staff as concerns grow over those infected but asymptomat­ic

- By Tom Morgan

FAILURES to launch weekly routine tests to identify asymptomat­ic hospital and care home staff are causing new Covid-19 hotspots, experts believe.

Tim Spector, a King’s College London professor who leads the Covid-19 symptom study app, and fellow epidemiolo­gist Carl Heneghan, a professor at Oxford, issued grave warnings over undetected cases among key workers. Over the past week, Weston-superMare’s general hospital has been forced to shut its doors to new admissions in part due to tests on all staff showing 100 of them were infected. Results indicated that six per cent of all workers were infected and asymptomat­ic.

There has also been a spike against the general downward trend in deaths in Northampto­nshire. Eleven died at Northampto­n General Hospital and four at Kettering over a four-day period.

Analysis by Prof Spector, head of the department of genetic epidemiolo­gy at King’s, estimates tens of thousands of Britons are infected with Covid-19, but are not being told to self-isolate. “There is this view that a lot of the current cases are being driven by hospitals and care homes,” he told The Sunday Telegraph.

“Many of the 8,000 estimated daily cases are care home or hospital driven and they are just not being tested enough to stamp it out.

“They should all be tested weekly, all the staff. When you go to hospital, you see it’s very difficult to social-distance.

“I think it’s clear they really need to tighten up on these things.”

Weston-super-Mare showed “there are a lot of undetected cases in hospital”. “If 10 to 20 per cent are asymptomat­ic, you have to routinely check hospital staff,” he said.

“We also need to get more people to use the symptom apps and that would give early warning signs. That should be done particular­ly in hospital staff. We’ve got about 120,000 healthcare workers on the app but it would be good if we had all one million because clearly we haven’t got the capacity to test everybody. By definition in the

Covid wards people take great care, but in the corridors, in the canteens, wherever, they are not.

“I think key workers should be swabbed every week. We know that most hospitals haven’t been tested weekly but we know there are some exceptions. It’s hugely varied regionally.”

At Weston, Dr William Oldfield, medical director of the University Hospitals Bristol and Weston NHS Foundation Trust, has said it was too early to say what was the “root cause” of the outbreak.

Staff have been urgently told to stop working elsewhere in the community.

Prof Heneghan said there were now stark difference­s between diminishin­g numbers of outbreaks in the community and those around hospitals and care homes.

“The asymptomat­ic issue is something we need to understand because it’s completely at odds from the point of view that you have some who aren’t affected,” he told The Sunday Telegraph.

“Areas where you’ve got densely populated people are always going to be difficult to eradicate [infections]. We learnt that in 2003 with the Sars outbreak. When we have these small pockets of people with symptoms, and I know of hospitals with 20 or 30 cases, we need to have a real and significan­t strategy with the people that are in contact with them.

“Normally when you have asymptomat­ics, it would be highly reassuring. The problem remains is that when this gets to the elderly or with conditions it seems to be devastatin­g and why that is we just don’t know. If we did, we would have a much better picture on how to treat and who to shield. I think there’s a need to urgently investigat­e the asymptomat­ics to find out what’s going on.”

‘We have 120,000 health workers on the symptoms app but it would be good if we had all one million’

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