Coronavirus: Hundreds of flu patients to be tested by UK hospitals and GPs

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Tests for coronavirus are being increased to include people displaying flu-like symptoms at 11 hospitals and 100 GP surgeries across the UK.

The tests will provide an “early warning” if the virus is spreading, Public Health England medical director Prof Paul Cosford said.

It comes as more schools closed or sent staff and pupils home following trips to Italy, which has over 300 cases.

The virus has also spread to other European countries.

Prof Cosford told BBC Radio 4’s Today programme: “We are heightening our vigilance because of the apparent spread of the virus in countries outside mainland China.”

Up to now, people were tested only if they displayed symptoms having recently returned from one of the countries where there has been an outbreak, including China, South Korea and northern Italy.

However, Prof Cosford said Public Health England was now working with hospitals and GP surgeries to conduct “random” tests.

These will target some patients with coughs, fevers or shortness of breath, regardless of whether they have travelled to a place where the virus is spreading.

“If we do get to the position of a more widespread infection across the country, then it will give us early warning that’s happening,” said Prof Cosford.

‘Difficult decisions’

He said the UK was still in the “containment” phase of dealing with the coronavirus, and added that efforts to identify and isolate people with the virus returning to the UK were “working really quite well”.

Prof Cosford said Public Health England was not giving “blanket advice” that schools should close if staff or pupils have travelled to areas with outbreaks of the virus.

But, he said, schools made “difficult decisions” according to their specific circumstances.

Four schools have shut completely for a week to carry out a “deep clean” after students and teachers returned from skiing trips in northern Italy over half term.

Hugh Hegarty, CEO of the trust which runs Trinity Catholic College in Middlesbrough, said the school closed because of the “potential risk” after students and staff returned from a ski trip near Verona.

“The challenge for us is that guidance was issued on Tuesday morning and the children had returned to the school on Monday,” he told the Today programme.

He said they advised children who had been on the trip to self-isolate at home, while the school as a whole would close for 72 hours, during which there would be a deep clean and school leaders would monitor the situation.

Mr Hegarty said it was hard for schools to determine if students or staff were showing concerning symptoms given that they resembled those of a cold or flu. “It’s February and it’s the north-east of England,” he said.

Another school, St Christopher’s C of E High School in Accrington, told parents it would be closed on Wednesday as a precautionary measure after some pupils returning from Pila in the Italian Alps said they felt unwell.


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