China Daily Global Weekly

COVID tests for Chinese panned

Health experts around the world denounce new rules of some nations as political moves

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Health experts and internatio­nal organizati­ons have criticized the requiremen­t by some countries for travelers from China to have a negative COVID-19 test as a condition for entry, saying such rule will not help prevent the spread of the virus.

The United States, Canada, India, the United Kingdom, Japan and Australia are among the countries that have announced tougher measures on travelers from China where the BF.7 strain — a shortened name for the BA.5.2.1.7 Omicron variant — is prevalent.

Kerry Bowman, an assistant professor at the University of Toronto’s Temerty Faculty of Medicine, said Canada’s requiremen­t for travelers from China to have proof of a negative COVID test was a political move and not based on science.

“This isn’t the early days of the pandemic,” he said, according to The Canadian Press, the national news agency. “So, I do think it’s largely political.”

Isaac Bogoch, an associate professor at the same faculty, told The Canadian Press that focused and targeted travel measures do not do much to prevent the spread of COVID. Canada was unable to prevent variants of the Alpha, Delta and the Omicron strains from entering the country, Bogoch noted.

Australia’s chief medical officer, Paul Kelly, said in a Dec 31 letter to the country’s health minister, Mark Butler, that, “I do not believe that there is sufficient public health rationale to impose any restrictio­n or additional requiremen­ts on travelers from China.”

“The BF.7 Omicron subvariant that appears to be a key driver to the outbreak in China has been present in Australia for some time and has been superseded by other circulatin­g subvariant­s,” Kelly said.

Fiona Russell, an infectious diseases epidemiolo­gist from the University of Melbourne, said pre-departure testing of travelers from one country alone would have a “very minimal impact” on preventing importatio­n of new variants.

Russell said in an interview with the Australian Broadcasti­ng Corporatio­n that people in China could be deterred from taking a supervised test to travel overseas because of fears of “discrimina­tory policies”.

French epidemiolo­gist Dominique Costagliol­a said that given that France is currently reducing its capacity to sequence the virus, testing arrivals from China seems little more than a “communicat­ion” exercise. “It is not very useful, apart from giving the impression that we are doing something,” she told Agence France-Presse.

Internatio­nal Air Transport Associatio­n Director General Willie Walsh criticized countries for introducin­g COVID-19 testing and other measures for travelers from China, “even though the virus is already circulatin­g widely within their borders”.

Airports Council Internatio­nal Europe released a statement expressing “regret regarding the actions of a number of states within the EU and globally for unilateral­ly imposing health-related travel requiremen­ts including systematic pre-departure or on-arrival testing of travelers from China”.

New Zealand’s minister for COVID-19 response, Ayesha Verrall, announced on Jan 4 that her country will not require travelers from China to be tested for the virus, saying there was minimal health risk to the public.

“We know that BF.7 is the prevalent variant in China and that it hasn’t caused significan­t outbreaks in other countries that, like New Zealand, have already been exposed to the BA.5 variant. So public health measures are not required to protect New Zealanders,” she said in a Radio New Zealand interview.

Verrall said scientists from the country’s Institute of Environmen­tal Science and Research would begin a program to test wastewater from internatio­nal flights to detect the virus in the coming weeks.

Rather than looking at China, many virus experts have turned their attention to the US and the rapidly spreading XBB.1.5 Omicron subvariant.

It has jumped from less than 10 percent of new infections in midDecembe­r to about 40 percent at the end of the month, according to the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s COVID-19 tracker.

Paul Hunter, a professor of medicine at the UK’s University of East Anglia, told AFP that the main future concern for the UK is the XBB.1.5 variant, which has probably already entered the country from the US.

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