Construction workers to get free tests as asymptomatic virus carriers targeted
This post has already been read 818 times!
Construction is being targeted by the government with regular rapid testing for workers without coronavirus symptoms in a roll out of rapid flow lateral tests, which return results in 30 minutes.
Local authorities “will be encouraged to target testing to people who cannot work from home during lockdown.” with the government is expanding its community testing scheme across the whole country and part of this construction workers will be offered rapid lateral flow tests which return results within 30 minutes.
One of the main issues is that one in three people have covid-19 without displaying any symptoms and employers are also being encouraged to participate in large-scale testing programmes.
Health Secretary Matt Hancock commented saying: “Rapid, regular testing is led by local authorities who design programmes based on their in-depth knowledge of the local populations, so testing can have the greatest impact.
“We are now expanding this offer to every local authority across the country, and asking testing to be targeted on workers who cannot work from home during this national lockdown, while asking employers to work with us to scale up workforce testing.
“Lateral flow tests have already been hugely successful in finding positive cases quickly – and every positive case found is helping to stop the spread – so I encourage employers and workers to take this offer up. We must all do all we can to stop the spread of Covid, right now.”
Matthew Fell, CBI UK Chief Policy Director, said: “Rapid mass testing is a key piece of the puzzle when it comes to getting on top of the virus. The health and safety of staff is paramount for employers, which is why they will be right behind this initiative.
“This expansion of testing will help more critical workers and those unable to work from home to operate safely, while also catching new cases more swiftly.
“Ramping up asymptomatic testing to all workplaces will require hand-in-glove partnership between health services, local authorities and businesses in each and every community.”