Mass coronavirus testing scheme getting under way in Liverpool

A pilot scheme of mass coronavirus testing in Liverpool is getting under way.

Six new centres are preparing to open at midday on Friday to allow everyone in the city to get tested.

The facilities, set up at the Exhibition Centre Liverpool and at council-run sports centres, will provide lateral flow tests, with a turnaround time of under an hour, for people who live and work in the city and do not have symptoms.

Anyone who does have symptoms can get a swab test at one of the existing mobile testing centres in the city, which can also be accessed by those without symptoms.

Speaking outside Liverpool Tennis Centre in Wavertree, where one of the test centres is being set up, director of public health Matt Ashton said there was capacity for 85 centres to be set up by the end of the pilot scheme, which is due to last for 10 days initially, with the prospect of being extended.

He said getting the community involved was key to its success.

He told the PA news agency: “This is a fantastic opportunity for us to test out new testing strategies, new testing technology, in the city and help us exit national lockdown in a strong position.

“It’ll give us a really good understanding of the virus in the city, the levels of the virus and where it is.

“It allows us to target our resources properly but it also allows us to help people understand their personal status and then control the spread of the virus, break the chains of transmission.

Soldiers set up at the Liverpool Tennis Centre
Soldiers set up at the Liverpool Tennis Centre

“This is not a top-down approach. This has absolutely been led by the city, requested by the city and this is about our communities being activated and helping to keep themselves and everybody else in the city safe.”

He said there had been a “strong, positive reaction” to the scheme so far and there was capacity to test everyone who wanted to be tested twice during the pilot period.

About 2,000 military personnel have been deployed to the city to help deliver the programme.

Mr Ashton said there were “fantastic benefits” to the programme but it would be a learning curve.

He said: “It is a huge logistical challenge so we have to have a sustainable option at the end of this as well. How do we have mass testing of our communities in the easiest way for everybody to be delivered and for our communities to engage with?

“This is not mandatory, this is for people to ask for and to get a test, so part of the pilot is understanding where that demand is and understanding how people respond to the pilot.”

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