The Daily Telegraph

Everything you need to know about the new tracking system

- until the end of the period, in case the virus is still being incubated.

By Laura Donnelly HEALTH EDITOR

FROM today, anyone with symptoms of coronaviru­s will be asked to undergo screening and those who test positive are required to pass on the names and phone numbers of anyone with whom they have been in recent close contact.

Q How will it work?

A Anyone with the key symptoms of coronaviru­s − a new continuous cough, fever or loss of sense of taste and smell − will be asked to self-isolate for at least seven days, and their household for 14 days, from the point symptoms showed. They should then immediatel­y order a coronaviru­s test at nhs.uk/coronaviru­s or call 119 if they do not have internet access.

Those who test positive will then be sent a text or email alert, telling them to share details of anyone with whom they have had recent close contact, and places visited. Close contact is defined as being within two metres for at least 15 minutes.

These people will then be contacted − usually by text and email − and instructed to enter self-isolation for up to 14 days (or less, depending when the contact occurred). If these individual­s develop symptoms, they will be asked to book a test. But even if it is negative, they will be told to stay in self-isolation

Q Does my whole household have to isolate?

A This advice will only be issued to those who test positive. Those who are self-isolating for 14 days because of close contact with confirmed cases will be told to keep away from the rest of their household as much as possible.

Q Whose details do I have to provide?

A Those who test positive will be asked to hand over all contact details for anyone in their household and anyone they have recently spent at least 15 minutes with, within a proximity of two metres. This means mobile phone numbers, email addresses, landlines and home addresses. But in some cases, warnings may be sent by post − although this system is likely to be too slow to be of much help.

Staff will also attempt to contact relevant companies – so that if a person has, for example, travelled by plane, the carrier would be contacted so passengers sitting nearby could be reached.

Q What if I don’t want to provide details, or if those who I have had close contact with try to persuade me not to hand them over? A The scheme is voluntary, with ministers yesterday repeatedly urging the public to “do the right thing”. If cooperatio­n is low, penalties − such as fines − may be introduced for non-compliance.

At the moment, ministers are hoping Britons will respond to the plea that the actions of a “tiny minority” of people could ultimately free up to 66million people from lockdown.

Q What if my test is negative?

A If you suffer symptoms of coronaviru­s, without having been contacted by the test and trace system, and have a test which proves negative, the obligation to self-isolate ends.

However, those who are contacted via the system will be told that they should remain in self-isolation for up to 14 days, even if their test is negative. This is just in case they are still incubating the virus and could spread it to others.

Q How long will the test take to come back? A On average, tests are currently taking 48 hours to come back. However, those being administer­ed by drive-through stations are being turned around most quickly, with 84 per cent done within 24 hours. Health officials are aware that slow turnaround of tests would make the system far less effective. A study yesterday suggested that if contacts are reached within three days of a test being carried out, up to 15 per cent of new cases could be reduced if four in five people comply with instructio­ns. This could only happen if test results are returned within 48 hours. If this slips to five days, the number of new cases might only fall by five per cent, the modelling shows.

Q Is the app still part of this?

A Health officials are still working on an app, which will mean those who have been in close proximity to those who test positive will be automatica­lly contacted and urged to self-isolate.

The system relies on bluetooth messaging between smartphone­s.

But its rollout has been repeatedly

delayed, with officials last night refusing to commit to any date for its launch. Yesterday the Government insisted it is not being delayed by technical problems, saying officials had learned from the Isle of Wight pilot that rolling out the system where people are asked to isolate starts better when it comes “in human form”, from contact tracers, rather than by text.

Q What if I’ve already had an antigen test which previously found I had the virus, think I have previously had symptoms or had a positive antibody test which suggests I have had it at some point? A Officials say this will make no difference to the instructio­ns issued. They say the science is still unclear about how much immunity is conferred from having Covid-19.

Q Will I only need to self-isolate once?

A Not necessaril­y. Those asked to isolate because they have a positive result can only be asked to do this once. But those being asked to do so as a precaution could see this happen more than once, given that the risks of exposure could rise as lockdown lifts.

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