Wuhan continues ambitious COVID-19 testing campaign

Some lining up at clinics worry coronavirus testing could rekindle disease

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Caption: A medical worker takes a swab from a Wuhan resident for the novel coronavirus test on Friday. The city plans to test all its citizens within 10 days. (Getty Images)

After a cluster of new cases, the city of Wuhan, the original epicentre of the novel coronavirus outbreak in China, continued a mass testing campaign of its 11 million residents on Saturday.
The local health authority says 113,609 nucleic acid tests were administered on Friday, a number more than 50 per cent higher than a day earlier and the highest since the Wuhan Municipal Health Commission started publishing the data on Feb. 21.
Health workers have tested more than three million residents for the virus since April and now have a goal to complete the tests over a 10-day period ending May 20, state media has reported. Every district in the city was told to submit a detailed testing plan by May 12.
The city began emerging from a two-month lock in late March.
Some residents crowding the test centres expressed concern on Saturday that the very act of getting tested could expose them to the coronavirus.
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Safety has become a hot topic on social media groups among the residents of Wuhan, people told Reuters as they converged on open-air test sites at clinics and other facilities. Many said, though, that they support the voluntary campaign.
Wuhan health authorities sprang back into action after confirming last weekend the central Chinese city's first cluster of new infections since it was released from virtual lockdown on April 8.
The new cases — all of them people who had previously shown no symptoms of the disease — spurred Wuhan authorities to launch a citywide search for asymptomatic carriers of the virus, aiming to gauge the level of COVID-19 risk.
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"Some people have expressed worry in the (social media) groups about the tests, which require people to cluster, and whether there's any infection risk," said one Wuhan resident who asked not to be named.
"But others rebutted those worries, saying such comments are not supportive of the government."

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Caption: Residents wearing face masks wait in a line to be tested for the novel coronavirus in Wuhan on Saturday. (Hector Retamal/AFP via Getty Images)

The unprecedented scale of testing indicates the official level of concern, some experts say. Others say it is an extremely costly exercise and question its effectiveness.
At a testing kiosk in Jianghan district in central Wuhan, a volunteer was patrolling and spraying disinfectant at a long line of people.
Many people observed social distancing, such as queuing one metre apart, and there were signs to remind them. But just as many did not. In some cases, volunteer workers were not insisting that they comply.
At another open-air testing kiosk, where throat swabs were taken, yellow and black stickers on the ground kept people from converging.
But at the back of the long queue, about 40 people gathered with no guidance from officials or volunteers.
Residents said the authorities have not told them when they would get the results of their tests.
China has confirmed 82,941 cases of COVID-19 as of Friday and 4,633 deaths. The government does not include people found to be asymptomatic carriers of the virus in its tally and does not publish a cumulative number of asymptomatic cases.