UK to pilot new COVID-19 mass testing approach in Liverpool

FILE PHOTO: The spread of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) in Liverpool

LONDON (Reuters) - Britain will launch a COVID-19 mass testing pilot scheme in the northwest city of Liverpool this week, offering everyone tests whether or not they have symptoms, in an attempt to find a new way to use testing to limit the spread of the coronavirus.

Prime Minister Boris Johnson promised a "world-beating" national test-and-trace system earlier this year, whereby people with symptoms get tested and the contacts of positive cases are asked to self-isolate. But the scheme has disappointed and the government's scientific advisory body said last month its impact on virus transmission was marginal.

The United Kingdom has the highest COVID-19 death toll in Europe, and a second national lockdown is due to come into force in England on Thursday, but the government has cited the prospect of regular mass-testing, which can pick up asymptomatic cases, by the spring as a reason for optimism.

"It is early days, but this kind of mass testing has the potential to be a powerful new weapon in our fight against COVID-19," Prime Minister Boris Johnson said in a statement.

The government said the Liverpool pilot would start on Friday using PCR swab tests, the default testing method to date, as well as new lateral flow tests and so-called LAMP tests, aimed at delivering faster results without the need for laboratory processing.

Everyone living or working in the city, one of the worst-hit in the country, will be offered repeat tests at existing sites as well as numerous new sites including care homes, schools, universities and workplaces.

Johnson said that dependent on the pilot's success, millions of the new rapid tests could be distributed elsewhere in the country before Christmas to help local authorities drive down transmission in their areas.

Many countries are exploring the role mass testing can play in containing the virus. Over the weekend, two-thirds of the Slovakian population were tested under such a scheme.

However, the head of the World Health Organization's (WHO) emergencies programme, Mike Ryan, has said that broad population testing is costly and unrealistic even if some testing of asymptomatic people can be helpful.

"Some caution is needed to qualify headlines that mass testing will somehow transform the situation we are now in," said Alexander Edwards, Associate Professor in Biomedical Technology at the University of Reading.

"Any testing programme can only be helpful in reducing health and economic impact of COVID-19 if it fits into a larger, coherent and effective strategy to slow transmission."

(Reporting by Estelle Shirbon and Alistair Smout; Editing by Hugh Lawson and Nick Macfie)