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Coronavirus: Hong Kong confirms 6,646 new cases as government considers mass at-home testing exercise to help ‘gauge infection situation’

  • A source says the mass at-home testing will serve as a ‘voluntary and supplementary’ measure, and will not replace an official universal screening exercise
  • Latest infections mark sixth consecutive day city’s daily caseload is below 10,000

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Volunteers pack kits of rapid Covid-19 tests, masks and medicine set to be distributed to Hong Kong residents at Tai Wo Hau Sports Centre.  Photo: Dickson Lee

Hong Kong residents may be asked to take part in mass at-home Covid-19 testing via kits set to be distributed from Saturday to help the government better gauge the current epidemic situation, the city’s leader has said.

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Chief Executive Carrie Lam Cheng Yuet-ngor floated the possibility at her regular coronavirus press conference on Thursday after being asked whether the government still planned to pursue a controversial compulsory universal testing drive.

“Since we are distributing rapid antigen tests in the anti-epidemic service bags, we would like to explore whether we can make use of this convenient and accurate tool … so that we can gauge the infection situation,” Lam said, referring to packs of supplies and medicine that would be handed out to all Hong Kong residents.

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Lam added that daily caseloads, though on the decline, were still too high to conduct universal screening via government-run testing sites, noting the healthcare system was unlikely to be able to cope with the new infections the exercise might uncover.

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