Thousands to be offered repeat testing in care homes
Research will give detailed picture of coronavirus infection in
care homes in England and mean care homes can react quickly to
outbreaks It will track who has the virus, past exposure and
infection over time Approximately 10,000 people in care homes will
be given repeat testing as part of a new government study into
coronavirus to understand more about its spread in these settings.
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Approximately 10,000 people in care homes will be given repeat testing as part of a new government study into coronavirus to understand more about its spread in these settings. The study will take place across over 100 care homes in England with swab tests (known as a PCR test to test if a person currently has the virus) and blood (antibody) tests for all consenting staff and residents over the next year. This will provide reassurance for those living and working in care homes and allow them to react quickly to outbreaks. It forms part of pillar 4 of the government’s COVID-19 testing strategy to conduct UK-wide surveillance testing to learn more about the spread of the virus. Minister for Care Helen Whately said:
The first blood samples took place on Thursday 11 June. This information will help inform future government strategy on the ongoing response to the virus, including lockdown and social distancing measures. The first results from initial participants are expected to be available in July. The research, carried out in collaboration with DHSC, UCL and NHS Data Foundry, will draw on results from whole care home testing and previous studies to build a more comprehensive picture of how outbreaks play out over time within the same home. Dr Laura Shallcross of UCL Institute of Health Informatics said:
Professor Martin Green OBE, Chief Executive, Care England:
On top of this surveillance research in care homes, the government has extended whole care home testing to all adult care homes after meeting the target of offering a test to every care home for over-65s and those with dementia in England by 6 June. Since the launch of whole care home testing, the government has provided test kits to over 12,000 care homes, and are now able to send out and process over 50,000 test kits a day. Background information
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