Antibody testing
Next week, the UK will begin offering antibody tests to health and care staff, eligible patients and care residents in England to see if they have had coronavirus, representing further progress in our national testing programme.
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Christopher Whiteside MBE is a Conservative activist. He was Conservative candidate for Leeds North East in the 2024 General election He has served as a County, City & District, Borough, Town and Parish councillor, and has also been a school governor and health authority member. He lives and works in the North of England, particularly spending time in Leeds where he works, other parts of Yorkshire, and Cumbria.
Next week, the UK will begin offering antibody tests to health and care staff, eligible patients and care residents in England to see if they have had coronavirus, representing further progress in our national testing programme.
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Comments
there has also been mention of a rapid antigen test, to use in conjunction with the current antigen test, though again the results are taken nationally and inputted into a system (centrally) though this system is a completely seperate system from the one mentioned earlier.
so we have seperate databases processed by different people using different systems. Once things leave the systems we cant break them down again into anything that would be of any use at a local level, we cant even find out the results of the tests.
So in the end for all the testing (which is a good start, Im all for local test, trace and isolate, said so all along) but for all the current centrilised testing we see reports like this one from the Manchester evening news telling us that people are being tested "but we dont know who they are, where they work, we dont know what their results are"
Until we can move from a central management approach, which sadly seems to be outside of the thinking of Westminster, then I fear that the atempts of controling the virus will fail.
FWIW with the current social distancing rules in place (ones which people are following when you go to a shop or a garden centre) I dont think we will see the dreaded "second wave" (I've explained why I dont like that term) during the summer. I would expect now further outbreaks during the winter, when people tend to spend much more time indoors. Unfortunatly that will co-incide with the annual flu outbreaks.
Unless we get an effective and safe vaccine much earlier than could possible be taken for granted, a second wave at some point is certainly more likely than not.
It might be in summer, I think the Autumn is probably most likely, or it could come in the winter. I hope not for exactly the reason you point to.
Whenever it comes we have to be ready.