The Oklahoman

UK to roll out rapid COVID-19 testing in Liverpool

- By Danica Kirka

LONDON—A halfmillio­n people in the English city of Liverpool will be regularly tested for COVID-19 in Britain's first citywide trial of widespread, rapid testing that the government hopes will be a new weapon in combating the pandemic.

Testing will begin later this week at sites throughout the city using a variety of technologi­es, including new methods that can provide results in an hour or less, the government said in a statement Tuesday. Everyone who lives or works in the city in northweste­rn England will be offered the test, regardless of whether they have symptoms.

Prime Minister Boris Johnson hopes mass testing will provide a way out of the coronaviru­s crisis, which has killed more than 46,000 people across the U. K. in Europe' s deadlie st outbreak. England is scheduled togo into a second national l ockdown on Thursday as the government struggles to control a second wave of infections that risks swamping hospitals and emergency rooms.

“These tests will help identify the many thousands of people in the city who don' t have symptoms but can still infect others without knowing,” Johnson said. “Dependent on their success in Liverpool, we will aim to distribute millions of these new rapid tests between now and Christmas and empower local communitie­s to use them to drive down transmissi­on in their areas.”

Liverpool has one of the highest infection rates in England, with more than 410 cases per 1 00,000 people, compared to 225 per 100,000 for the nation as a whole.

Mayor Joe Anderson said he expects the program to last six to eight weeks as authoritie­s work to bring the local outbreak under control. Rapid testing for healthcare workers, teachers and students will be particular­ly useful in helping the city return to normal after the national l ockdown ends, he said.

About 2,000 military personnel will help t he National Health Service and independen­t contractor­s deliver the tests.

“This first deployment of whole city testing in Liverpool is a really important step forward and is thanks to the big increase in testing capacity and our investment in new testing technologi­es,'' said Dido Harding, the head of the Test and Trace program.

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