Western Mail

‘Up to 80% may not show illness’

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THE UK Health Secretary has said as many as 80% of people who tested positive for coronaviru­s during a study of the pandemic in England had not displayed any symptoms.

The Office for National Statistics (ONS) has been carrying out a survey using swab testing to determine how many people from across the country at any one time are infected with Covid-19.

In the vast majority of cases, said Matt Hancock, those who had tested positive had not been presenting any symptoms.

Speaking at the daily Downing Street briefing, the Cabinet minister said: “The big-picture answer is that yes there are some people who don’t have symptoms but do have the virus.

“And, in fact, in the ONS study we find that around 70-80% of people who test positive don’t have symptoms.

“That is quite a significan­t finding and one of the important things about this disease, in the same way that asymptomat­ic transmissi­on is one of the things that makes controllin­g this disease really hard and is novel for any coronaviru­s, and is one of the things that makes it so difficult.”

Mr Hancock said the NHS test-and-trace scheme was part of the solution as isolating those who test positive for the virus would “break the chain of transmissi­on”, particular­ly when they would not have otherwise known they were carrying the disease.

Baroness Harding, who is heading up the NHS test-andtrace programme, said a rollout of antibody testing for the public would “come in time”, with healthcare staff currently being tested.

Antibodies being present in a blood sample are a sign that someone has contracted the virus in the past.

But Lady Harding said the issue was that not enough was known about what level of protection testing positive for antibodies provided.

Earlier in the UK outbreak, there had initially been talk of immunity certificat­es being issued by the government to allow those who had previously contracted the virus to be exempt from some lockdown measures.

Lady Harding, speaking at the press briefing, said: “If we have an antibody test what it tells you is you have antibodies.

“Over time we would expect that we would build up the evidence to demonstrat­e what proportion or level of antibodies you need...but at the moment, the science isn’t there.”

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