Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Up to 30% of coronaviru­s cases asymptomat­ic

In South Korea, nationwide testing, comprehens­ive isolation of Covid-19 patients and strict rules on social interactio­n have shown results. The measures have proved effective in slowing the spread of the coronaviru­s.

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The strategies for handling the spread of coronaviru­s are as varied as countries themselves. National health authoritie­s, for instance, have different interpreta­tions of the infectious­ness of asymptomat­ic patients.

As a rule, infected people start to show symptoms within five days. But in some cases, the incubation period can last as long as three weeks.

Informatio­n released by the Chinese government, and reported in the South China Morning Post newspaper, suggests that the number of "silent carriers" — that's people who have tested positive for the Covid-19 coronaviru­s but who show no symptoms, or delayed symptoms — could be as high as 30%.

Those Chinese data have been confirmed by a group of Japanese experts, led by Hiroshi Nishiura, an epidemiolo­gist at Hokkaido University.

Among the Japanese patients evacuated from Wuhan, the center of the coronaviru­s outbreak, 30.8% were asymptomat­ic.

In a letter to the Internatio­nal Journal of Infectious Diseases, the Japanese experts say there's "a gap" between reports from China and estimates based on cases diagnosed outside China and that that suggests a "substantia­l number of cases are underdiagn­osed."

Their numbers stand in stark contrast to estimates from the World Health Organizati­on (WHO), which suggests transmissi­on of the virus via asymptomat­ic patients is rare.

WHO data suggests asymptomat­ic infections in the European Union are between one and 3%.

Read more: Coronaviru­s: We can still laugh!

Blanket testing without symptoms

In most European Union countries and the USA, where only people with symptoms are tested for coronaviru­s, the number of infections is rising rapidly.

Germany's Federal Ministry of Health says people will only get tested if they present with flulike symptoms AND were in a region with known cases of coronaviru­s cases in the past 14 days OR if they had contact with a person who had tested positive for Covid-19 in the past 14 days.

If, however, you've had contact with an infected person but show no symptoms yourself, you are sent into self-isolation. But self-isolation is seldom monitored in Germany.

Meanwhile, in China and South Korea, where the earliest cases of SARS-CoV-2 were detected, the number of new infections is in decline. In both countries, people are tested if they have had any close contact with an infected person, regardless of whether they show symptoms or not.

Read more: How does testing for the coronaviru­s work?

People who test positive in China and South Korea are sent into quarantine and constantly monitored, even if they show no symptoms.

In South Korea, people who breach quarantine regulation­s can face a fine of up to 3 million South Korean Won (about $2500). New draft legislatio­n could see that fine go up to 10 million South Korean Won and include a potential one-year prison sentence.

Uncomplica­ted test opportunit­ies

The number of new infections in South Korea rose rapidly in February. But since then, the country has seen the number of new infections fall.

About 9000 of South Korea's 50 million-strong population are infected, and 120 South Koreans have died due to a Covid-19 infection. There are less than 100 new infections per day.

South Korean officials have put up numerous checkpoint­s and tents, where anyone and everyone can get tested for coronaviru­s free-of-charge. The country has tested at least 300,000 people.

Every day, a further 20,000 people can get tested, including at 40 "drive-through" coronaviru­s test sites. Those drivethrou­ghs have been copied in other countries.

Read more: Coronaviru­s vaccine: 'First tests coming soon'

As a result, South Korea has tested more people than other countries, namely 5.6 in every 1000 residents. Compare that to Germany, where a maximum of 160,000 tests can be conducted each week, according to the Robert-Koch-Institute, and you get a rate of 1.9 in every 1000 people. The USA has tested a mere 30,000 people.

Successful containmen­t policy Containmen­t in South Korea seems to have worked without a full lockdown or any drastic travel restrictio­ns. Public life has been reduced massively, and people are keeping their distance from one another, but the country wants to avoid a complete shutdown.

"South Korea is a democratic republic, we feel a lockdown is not a reasonable choice," said Kim Woo-Joo, an expert in infectious diseases at Korea University, quoted in the specialist journal, Science.

Instead of a nationwide lockdown, South Korea had introduced "the most expansive and well-organized testing program in the world, combined with extensive efforts to isolate infected people and trace and quarantine their contacts," writes Dennis Normile in the journal.

It's thought that the intensive testing regime has also possibly caught many "silent carriers" in areas around infected people.

"Korea currently has a significan­tly higher rate of asymptomat­ic cases than other countries, perhaps due to our extensive testing," said Jeong Eunkyeong, director of Korea Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (KCDC), at a press briefing on March 16. Far-reaching powers

On top of that, South Korea has dug deep into the personal rights of its population.

In an attempt to minimize infections, residents receive personaliz­ed informatio­n about the risks of the coronaviru­s in their immediate areas. Local authoritie­s have access to detailed informatio­n about coronaviru­s patients, including their age, biological sex, and a profile of their movements.

Since the MERS crisis in 2015, the South Korea government has legal powers to collect cell phone and credit card informatio­n, enabling it to reconstruc­t the movements of Covid-19 positive people.

The data are then anonymized and forwarded to apps, which can help everyone see whether they have had contact with an infected person.

Read more: Where did coronaviru­s come from? How long does it last on surfaces? Your questions answered

 ??  ?? Am I infected although I feel fine? Rapid testing delivers quick answers
Am I infected although I feel fine? Rapid testing delivers quick answers
 ??  ?? The coronaviru­s is most often detected with a process called polymerase chain reaction (PCR)
The coronaviru­s is most often detected with a process called polymerase chain reaction (PCR)

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