Covid 19 Pandemic

353 quotes
0 likes
0Verified
16Authors

Timeline

First Quote Added

April 10, 2026

Latest Quote Added

April 10, 2026

All Quotes

"As the number of UK coronavirus cases surged in early 2021, the government announced a potential game-changer in the fight against COVID-19: millions of cheap, rapid virus tests. On 10 January, it said it would roll these tests out across the country, to be taken by people even if they have no symptoms. Similar tests will play a crucial part in US President Joe Biden’s plans to tame the raging outbreak in the United States. These speedy tests, which typically mix nasal or throat swabs with liquid on a paper strip to return results within half an hour, are thought of as tests of infectiousness, not of infection. They can detect only high viral loads, so they will miss many people with lower levels of the SARS-CoV-2 virus. But the hope is that they will help to curb the pandemic by quickly identifying the most contagious people, who might otherwise unknowingly pass on the virus. Yet, as the government announced its plan, a furious argument broke out. Some scientists were delighted by the United Kingdom’s testing strategy. Others said that the tests would miss so many infections that, if rolled out in their millions, they could cause more harm than good. Many people might be falsely reassured by a negative test result and change their behaviour, argued Jon Deeks, who specializes in test evaluation at the University of Birmingham, UK. And, he said, the tests would miss even more infections if people self-administered them, rather than relying on trained professionals. He and his Birmingham colleague Jac Dinnes are among scientists who want more data on rapid coronavirus tests before they’re used widely. But other researchers soon fired back, saying that the claim that the tests could cause harm was wrong and “irresponsible” (see go.nature.com/3bcyzfm). They included Michael Mina, an epidemiologist at the Harvard T. H. Chan School of Public Health in Boston, Massachusetts, who says that the arguments are delaying a much-needed solution to the pandemic. “We continue to say we don’t have enough data yet, but we’re in the middle of a war — we really can’t get any worse than we are at the moment in terms of the case counts,” he says."

- COVID-19 testing

• 0 likes• covid-19-pandemic•
"In South Korea, authorities use data-surveillance techniques to get around the problem of people being unwilling to disclose — or unable to recall — close contacts. “We need to double-check,” says Daejoong Lee at the South Korean Ministry of Economy and Finance. A law passed in response to an outbreak of Middle East respiratory syndrome (MERS) in 2015 allows authorities to use data from credit cards, mobile phones and closed-circuit television to trace a person’s movements and identify others they might have exposed to the virus. Information about cases is published online, an approach that allowed the country to avoid broad lockdowns and “worked very well”, says Lee. Still, in March, the Korea Centers for Disease Control issued guidelines limiting the release of ‘excessive’ information, after regional governments published maps of infected people’s routes in too much detail. In one case, a person was wrongly accused of having an affair with his sister-in-law because their overlapping maps revealed they dined together at a restaurant. Tracers in Vietnam also use extra data — such as Facebook or Instagram posts and mobile-phone location data — to check a person’s movements against those reported to contact-tracers. But the country’s success was down to “the boots on the ground”, says Todd Pollack, an infectious-disease specialist at the Partnership for Health Advancement in Vietnam, a collaboration that provides training and support for the nation’s health system. Contact-tracers interview people face-to-face and use the extra surveillance data to prod for more details."

- COVID-19 testing

• 0 likes• covid-19-pandemic•
"Municipal wastewater is a composite biological sample of an entire community with each member of the community inputting biological specimens every day. It is therefore no surprise that wastewater has been tapped as an epidemiological tool to gauge aspects of public health, such as narcotic usage, the reemergence of poliovirus, and infection rates of viral and bacterial diseases. COVID-19 has accelerated the interest in wastewater-based epidemiology (WBE) due to the fact that SARS-CoV-2 genes are detected in the feces of many infected individuals. More established epidemiological tools used to track cases in a community have been hindered during the COVID-19 pandemic by diagnostic kit shortages, asymptomatic or mild cases that do not encounter the medical system or delay seeking medical attention, and the lag times between testing and reporting. As a result, public health officials and administrators have had to make critical decisions about opening or closing communities with limited surveillance data. Scientists, engineers, public officials, and the general public, are optimistic that WBE could provide additional data on COVID-19 infections in a community. In fact, the United States Center for Disease Control has established the National Wastewater Surveillance System as a framework for using WBE to inform the response to the COVID-19 pandemic. Recent published studies have reported SARS-CoV-2 detection and quantification in sewage. Based on these reports, numerous entities/organizations across the globe and across scales are moving to implement WBE. It remains to be seen how the data generated from wastewater surveillance should be interpreted or will ultimately be used to make public health decisions. Potential uses include informing on the presence or absence of COVID-19 in a community, similar to polio surveillance; tracking trends over time to project infection trajectory in the coming days; or even using the SARS-CoV-2 concentrations in wastewater to estimate prevalence in a community. The latter application requires a clear understanding of fecal shedding dynamics over the course of the illness, which is not yet established."

- COVID-19 testing

• 0 likes• covid-19-pandemic•
"The WHO’s benchmark for a successful COVID-19 contact-tracing operation is to trace and quarantine 80% of close contacts within 3 days of a case being confirmed — a goal few countries achieve. But even that’s not quick enough, says Christophe Fraser, a mathematical biologist at the University of Oxford, UK. Transmission is too rapid and the virus can spread before symptoms emerge, he points out. Modelling by Fraser and his team suggests that even if all cases isolate and all contacts are found and quarantined within three days, the epidemic will continue to grow. He says that in a single day, 70% of cases need to isolate and 70% of contacts need to be traced and quarantined for the outbreak to slow (defined as each infected person passing the virus to fewer than one other, on average). But there are ways that contact-tracers can get ahead of a rapidly spreading outbreak. One is to cast a wider net around each case, so that second-order contacts — ‘contacts of contacts’ — are traced and quarantined; in Vietnam, tracers sometimes reached out to third-order contacts if a case was identified late in its infectious cycle. As many as 200 contacts for each case are found and tested, says Pham Quang Thai, an epidemiologist at the National Institute of Hygiene and Epidemiology in Hanoi, who leads the national contact-tracing taskforce. “If we want to run as fast as the virus, we have to chase not only the first round,” he says."

- COVID-19 testing

• 0 likes• covid-19-pandemic•
"Another way researchers are trying to bring testing to the masses is to devise assays that could be used in temporary testing facilities, drive-through testing centres and even in people’s homes. At least two teams are taking advantage of the gene-editing technology CRISPR to power such tests. For example, researchers led by Zhang have developed a coronavirus assay that can be run in a single test tube in about an hour4. But it still requires heating the sample to about 65 °C, and it’s not as sensitive as a PCR-based assay. “That’s okay, because it’s much easier to use,” Zhang says. When tested multiple times on samples from 12 people infected with coronavirus, the assay detected the virus on nearly every occasion. The test builds on an approach that Zhang co-developed in 2017, called SHERLOCK5, which relies on the ability of the CRISPR machinery to home in on specific genetic sequences. Researchers program a guide molecule to latch on to a particular stretch of the SARS-CoV-2 genome. If the guide molecule finds a match, a CRISPR enzyme generates a signal that can be detected either as a fluorescent glow or as a dark band on a paper dipstick (see ‘Cut and detect’). On 6 May, the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) authorized a SHERLOCK coronavirus assay for emergency use. The test is made by biotechnology firm Sherlock BioSciences in Cambridge, Massachusetts (of which Zhang is a co-founder), and the company has partnered with a manufacturer to mass-produce the kits. (See also ‘Coronavirus assays assessed’.)"

- COVID-19 testing

• 0 likes• covid-19-pandemic•
"Several other tests are based on a technique called loop-mediated isothermal amplification (LAMP), which also works at a constant temperature and has been used to identify viruses such as Zika. LAMP relies on two enzymes — one to convert the viral RNA to DNA, and another to copy DNA — as well as a set of four to six short primers designed to recognize different snippets of the viral genome. These fragments not only help to get the copying started, as in RT-PCR, but also allow newly copied DNA strands to form looped structures that can be amplified much more rapidly than in standard PCR (see ‘Loop the loop’). It is less accurate, however, and only a few dozen samples can be run at a time. Because the technique doesn’t need special instruments, it can be used in the field and in regions that lack advanced equipment, including remote areas and refugee camps, says Vicent Pelechano, a genomics expert at the Karolinska Institute in Stockholm, who co-developed a LAMP-based assay for SARS-CoV-2. “All you need is a test tube containing the primers, a pipette, a hotplate and a pot of water,” he says. A single test would cost about $1 — not counting labour. In the lab, Pelechano and colleagues’ LAMP-based test could detect as few as 10 copies of a SARS-CoV-2 genome in no longer than 40 minutes1. The researchers then tested the assay using samples from 248 people with confirmed coronavirus infection, and could detect the virus nearly 90% of the time2. Pelechano acknowledges that the test might turn out to be less accurate for some samples, such as those contaminated with blood. But in some places, the trade-off in accuracy could be worth it. Low-income countries and war-torn areas don’t have enough PCR machines to perform the standard diagnostic test for coronavirus, says Nabil Karah, a clinical microbiologist at Umeå University in Sweden. Karah is working with other scientists and with Pelechano’s team to bring their LAMP-based test to Syria to increase local testing capacity."

- COVID-19 testing

• 0 likes• covid-19-pandemic•