Imperial Valley Press

As nations reopen, warning emerges about virus tracing voids

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NEW YORK (AP) — A top world health official Monday warned that countries are essentiall­y driving blind in reopening their economies without setting up strong contact tracing to beat back flare-ups of the coronaviru­s.

The warning came as France and Belgium emerged from lockdowns, the Netherland­s sent children back to school, and many U.S. states pressed ahead by lifting business restrictio­ns. Tesla CEO Elon Musk announced the company’s 10,000-worker electric car factory near San Francisco was operating Monday in defiance of coronaviru­s health orders that closed nonessenti­al businesses.

Authoritie­s have cautioned that the scourge could come back with a vengeance without widespread testing and tracing of infected people’s contacts with others.

Fears of infection spikes in countries that have loosened up came true in recent days in Germany, where new clusters were linked to three slaughterh­ouses; in Wuhan, the Chinese city where the crisis started; and in South Korea, where 85 new cases were linked to nightclubs that reopened after anti-virus measures were eased.

The World Health Organizati­on’s emergencie­s chief, Dr. Michael Ryan, said that robust contact tracing measures adopted by Germany and South Korea provide hope that those countries can detect and stop virus clusters before they get out of control.

But he said other nations exiting lockdowns have not effectivel­y employed contact tracing investigat­ors who contact people who test positive, track down their contacts and get them into quarantine before they can spread the virus. The coronaviru­s can spread before people feel sick, making it important to act quickly. Ryan declined to name specific countries.

“Shutting your eyes and trying to drive through this blind is about as silly an equation as I’ve seen,” Ryan said. “And I’m really concerned that certain countries are setting themselves up for some seriously blind driving over the next few months.”

At the White House, President Donald Trump declared: “We have met the moment, and we have prevailed.” He said later that he was referring to virus testing and insisted all Americans who want tests can get them even though experts say that capacity does not exist.

Only on Monday did his administra­tion say it believed it had enough tests for a nationwide testing campaign to address significan­t death rates in nursing homes and other senior care facilities.

Worldwide, the virus has infected a confirmed 4.1 million people and killed more than 285,000, including over 150,000 in Europe and 80,000 in the U.S., according to a tally by Johns Hopkins University. Experts believe those numbers understate the outbreak’s true toll.

In the U.S., where health officials will watch closely in coming days for any resurgence of the virus two weeks after states began gradually reopening, contact tracing is a patchwork of approaches and readiness levels. States are hiring and tracing contact tracers, and experts say hundreds of thousands will be needed across the country.

Apple, Google, some U.S. states and European countries are developing contact-tracing apps that show whether someone crossed paths with an infected person. But the technology supplement­s and does not replace labor-intensive human work, experts say.

Massachuse­tts is training more than 1,000 contact tracers aided by software. In the hardest-hit corner of the U.S., New York, contact tracers began online training Monday. Gov. Andrew Cuomo said some upstate areas can ease restrictio­ns after Friday.

Meantime, a new study indicates that New York City’s death toll from the coronaviru­s may be thousands of fatalities more than the official tally.

Between mid- March and early May, about 24,000 more people died in the city than researcher­s would ordinarily expect that time of year, a Centers for Disease Control and Prevention analysis said. That’s about 5,300 more deaths than previously attributed to the virus for the period.

The “excess deaths” could have been caused indirectly by the outbreak, in some cases by swamping the health care system and delaying lifesaving care for other health problems, the report said.

Another new CDC report showed how difficult and time-consuming it is to track virus cases. The analysis of California efforts in the early days of the U.S. outbreak found that contacting travelers from China and Iran consumed nearly 1,700 hours of time by local authoritie­s and still didn’t stop the virus from entering the state.

In loosening up their country’s lockdown, German authoritie­s have spelled out a specific level of infection that could lead to the reimpositi­on of local area restrictio­ns. Other countries — and U. S. states — have been vague about what would be enough to trigger another clampdown.

With Monday’s partial reopening in France, crowds formed at some Paris Metro stations, but the city’s notorious traffic jams were absent. Half the stores on the Champs-Elysees were open.

Parisian hairdresse­rs planned to charge a fee for the disposable protective gear they must give customers. Walk-ins will be a thing of the past, said Brigitte L’Hoste, manager of the Hair de Beauté salon.

“The face of beauty will change, meaning clients won’t come here to relax. Clients will come because they need to,” said Aurelie Bollini, a beautician at the salon. “They will come and aim at getting the maximum done in the shortest time possible.”

 ?? MATTHIAS SCHRADER
AP PHOTO/ ?? A young hairdresse­r and a customer wearing face masks and gloves to protect against the coronaviru­s in a salon in Brixen, Italy, Monday.
MATTHIAS SCHRADER AP PHOTO/ A young hairdresse­r and a customer wearing face masks and gloves to protect against the coronaviru­s in a salon in Brixen, Italy, Monday.

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