Montpellier (France): A researcher from SkillCell, a biotechnology company, shows a rapid-acting saliva-based test for Covid-19 on Tuesday. The fast-acting saliva test is used by healthcare professionals and works with reagents at a temperature of 65 celsius degrees for 30 minutes after collecting the saliva sample.—AFP
Montpellier (France): A researcher from SkillCell, a biotechnology company, shows a rapid-acting saliva-based test for Covid-19 on Tuesday. The fast-acting saliva test is used by healthcare professionals and works with reagents at a temperature of 65 celsius degrees for 30 minutes after collecting the saliva sample.—AFP

LONDON: European governments are battling to curb coronavirus surges with new controls and increased testing, while trying to avoid the devastating nationwide lockdowns of March and April.

Cases climbed rapidly in Britain, France, Germany, Poland, and the Czech Republic on Tuesday, raising fears that the death rate could rise.

Hospitals in Paris will have most of their intensive care beds packed with Covid-19 patients as soon as next week, the system’s chief warned on Tuesday.

“It’s inevitable,” Martin Hirsch, the head of the 39 hospitals in Paris and its suburbs, told the Parisien newspaper, estimating beds would reach 70-90pc capacity by October 24.

President Emmanuel Macron is widely expected to announce tighter restrictions in a prime-time TV interview Wednesday night, with some media speculating Paris and other cities could face evening curfews.

Russia on Tuesday repor­ted its highest-ever number of daily virus deaths, at 244, and a record number of new cases at almost 14,000.

Italy imposed new, tougher rules to control a resurgence, including an end to parties, amateur football matches and snacking at bars at night.

Polish Prime Minister Mateusz Morawiecki on Tuesday became the latest high-profile figure to go into quarantine after coming into contact with a person with Covid-19.

And Portugal’s football federation said star striker Cristiano Ronaldo had tested positive for the virus.

Britain’s Prime Minister Boris Johnson, whose country has the highest death toll in Europe, on Monday had already ordered pubs in Liverpool to shut as part of a new strategy.

He said businesses forced to close would get support from the government, but his focus on shutting hospitality venues sparked anger, as have similar measures elsewhere.

“Catastrophic, catastro­phic,” said Simon Ashdown, owner of the Chepstow Castle pub in Liverpool. “I don’t think there’ll be many businesses after this lockdown.”

Chinese city

China rushed to test an entire city of nine million people within days on Tuesday after a minor coronavirus outbreak, underlining Beijing’s capacities as European nations in particular struggle to contain surging new infections.

The virus is still spreading rapidly worldwide, with over one million deaths and 37 million infections, and many nations that suppressed their first outbreaks now face a second wave.

Without a vaccine, governments are wary of allowing the virus to spread unchecked.

China — where Covid-19 first emerged late last year — launched a drive to test all residents of Qingdao after a handful of cases were detected on Sunday.

More than four million samples had been collected and 1.9 million results ret­ur­­ned as of Tuesday afternoon, Qingdao authorities said, adding that no new cases had been found beyond already confirmed infections. Chinese officials intend to test the entire city — around 9.4 million people — by Thursday.

In scenes contrasting with the fumbled testing efforts elsewhere, health workers in protective clothing swiftly set up tents and residents queued deep into Monday night to provide samples.

Published in Dawn, October 14th, 2020

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