The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

U.N. backs testing those without symptoms

- By Jamey Keaten and Maria Cheng

The World Health Organizati­on said countries should actively test people to find cases if they don’t show symptoms.

» The World Health Organizati­on said Thursday that countries should actively test people to find coronaviru­s cases even if they don’t show symptoms — a stance that comes after the U.S. health agency switched its policy to say that asymptomat­ic contacts of infected people don’t need to be tested.

At a press briefing, Maria Van Kerkhove, WHO’s technical lead for COVID-19, said when officials are investigat­ing clusters of COVID-19, “testing may need to be expanded to look for individual­s who are on the more mild end of the spectrum or who may indeed be asymptomat­ic.”

Yet new guidance from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention says it’s not necessary for people who have been in close contact with infected people but who don’t feel sick to get tested.

The agency had previously advised local health officials to test people who’d been within about 6 feet of an infected person for over 15 minutes.

Van Kerkhove said countries were free to adapt WHO’s testing guidance for their individual needs and while testing itself was important, it was equally critical to get testing results back fast.

“What’s really important is that testing is used as an opportunit­y, to define active cases so that they can be isolated and so that contact tracing can also take place,” she said. “This is really fundamenta­l to breaking chains of transmissi­on.”

Van Kerkhove also expressed concerns about public behavior, saying she’s growing “a little bit concerned” that the use of masks is leading some people to think they don’t need to keep safe distances from others.

“We’re seeing that people aren’t really adhering to the physical distancing anymore,” Van Kerkhove said.

“Even if you’re wearing masks, you still need to try to do the physical distancing of at least one meter and even further if you can.”

Earlier Thursday, the WHO’s chief for Europe, Dr. Hans Kluge, warned that the coronaviru­s is a “tornado with a long tail” and said rising infections among young people could spread to more vulnerable older people and cause an uptick in deaths.

He said younger people are more likely to come into closer contact with the elderly as the weather cools across the continent and families move activities inside.

“We don’t want to do unnecessar­y prediction­s but this is definitely one of the options: that at one point there would be more hospitaliz­ations and an uptick in mortality,” he said, speaking from Copenhagen, site of WHO’s European headquarte­rs.

“It may be that younger people indeed are not necessaril­y going to die from it but it’s a tornado with a long tail and it’s a multi-organ disease,” he said.

Kluge said 32 out of 55 states and territorie­s in WHO’s European region have recorded a 14-day new infection rate increase of over 10%, calling that “definitely an uptick which is generalize­d in Europe.” He said the autumn presented a “tricky situation” because of widespread school reopenings, the onset of the flu season and the increased mortality among older people in winter months.

The U.N. agency this week recommende­d that children 6 to 11 wear masks at times to prevent the spread of the virus, especially in areas of wide community transmissi­on or where social distancing cannot be maintained, and children 12 and older wear masks as often as adults.

As cases across Europe have increased amid the summer holiday season, WHO also issued advice for hotels and related businesses.

WHO said hotels should consider reducing occupancy rates to ensure social distancing and said all staff and guests should comply with basic COVID-19 prevention measures like frequent handwashin­g and mask-wearing.

It said physical barriers like protective plexiglass shields should be used to separate hotel staff and guests at reception desks.

WHO said national guidance should be followed on whether or not indoor dining was allowed but that “buffets are not recommende­d.”

It said gyms, pools and spa facilities could be used with certain restrictio­ns, like limiting the maximum number of people to ensure social distancing.

 ?? BOB EDME — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A woman wears a face mask near the beach, in Saint Jean de Luz, southweste­rn France. The World Health Organizati­on’s top official in Europe, Dr. Hans Kluge warned Thursday case counts among young people could ultimately spread the virus.
BOB EDME — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A woman wears a face mask near the beach, in Saint Jean de Luz, southweste­rn France. The World Health Organizati­on’s top official in Europe, Dr. Hans Kluge warned Thursday case counts among young people could ultimately spread the virus.

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