Federal government changes tack on who will get tested and who won’t amid global shortage of kits

The huge change coming to coronavirus testing: Federal government limits who will get tested amid global shortage of kits

  • Overseas travellers will no longer get tested after Australia closed borders  
  • Medical officer said an announcement about testing will be made this week 
  • There is currently a global shortage of testing kits – not everyone can be tested
  • Coronavirus symptoms: what are they and should you see a doctor?

The guidelines for testing for COVID-19 will be changed this week to drop the overseas travel component, as the coronavirus spreads.

‘We’ll be removing the traveller component, but we’re working on that at the moment,’ Australia’s deputy chief medical officer Paul Kelly told ABC’s Q&A program on Monday.

He said there would be announcements on the test changes this week.

The guidelines for testing for COVID-19 will be changed this week to drop the overseas travel component, as the coronavirus spreads 

Australia's deputy chief medical officer Paul Kelly said the initial guidelines were set out because the tests needed to be used 'where it's most likely to be positive'

Australia’s deputy chief medical officer Paul Kelly said the initial guidelines were set out because the tests needed to be used ‘where it’s most likely to be positive’ 

He defended the initial guidelines now that people not showing symptoms were spreading the virus, as more than half of the 1,886 cases in Australia directly came from an overseas travellers.

‘We need to test where it’s most likely to be positive. Up to this point it’s most likely to be in people that have been returning from overseas,’ he said.

There was also a global shortage of testing kits which meant the health authorities had set guidelines for who should be tested.

‘Mostly the guidelines for testing are about a travel component and the travel is decreasing,’ Dr Kelly said.

He said the coronavirus was ‘much more infectious than the flu’, making social distancing and isolation important to stop its spread.

‘It does spread quickly and reasonably short contact can actually allow that to spread from person to person.’

Around 140,000 Australians have been tested for the virus,

Seven people have died.

So far around 140,000 Australians have been tested for COVID-19 with 1,886 cases and seven deaths being recorded so far

 

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