The Japan Times - Austria Covid-19 'gargle' tests in expansion drive

EUR -
AED 3.776316
AFN 78.651279
ALL 99.457486
AMD 408.161258
ANG 1.85215
AOA 468.831569
ARS 1083.06439
AUD 1.663536
AWG 1.851937
AZN 1.743664
BAM 1.960462
BBD 2.074934
BDT 125.328042
BGN 1.955876
BHD 0.387509
BIF 3005.767325
BMD 1.02814
BND 1.404795
BOB 7.117168
BRL 5.998143
BSD 1.027669
BTN 89.542424
BWP 14.444491
BYN 3.363296
BYR 20151.544238
BZD 2.06439
CAD 1.498305
CDF 2930.199289
CHF 0.939468
CLF 0.036724
CLP 1013.314242
CNY 7.400962
CNH 7.53367
COP 4282.460186
CRC 523.568009
CUC 1.02814
CUP 27.24571
CVE 110.625039
CZK 25.229514
DJF 182.721221
DKK 7.461664
DOP 63.590408
DZD 139.682669
EGP 51.765716
ERN 15.4221
ETB 131.461442
FJD 2.396696
FKP 0.846763
GBP 0.829519
GEL 2.940698
GGP 0.846763
GHS 15.782111
GIP 0.846763
GMD 74.538852
GNF 8898.552119
GTQ 7.95191
GYD 215.003389
HKD 8.012074
HNL 26.179257
HRK 7.587209
HTG 134.422939
HUF 408.689809
IDR 16827.567579
ILS 3.676783
IMP 0.846763
INR 89.439596
IQD 1346.234204
IRR 43284.694871
ISK 146.199284
JEP 0.846763
JMD 161.975192
JOD 0.72936
JPY 158.992086
KES 132.629871
KGS 89.910977
KHR 4133.122853
KMF 486.155572
KPW 925.326125
KRW 1501.526913
KWD 0.317418
KYD 0.856466
KZT 537.102953
LAK 12360.8086
LBP 92069.938038
LKR 307.855102
LRD 204.508329
LSL 19.433715
LTL 3.03583
LVL 0.621911
LYD 5.046
MAD 10.37377
MDL 19.254444
MGA 4906.859869
MKD 61.512138
MMK 3339.358654
MNT 3493.619872
MOP 8.25
MRU 41.055634
MUR 48.622278
MVR 15.843824
MWK 1782.133413
MXN 21.093629
MYR 4.600932
MZN 65.708383
NAD 19.433715
NGN 1535.465712
NIO 37.819939
NOK 11.732491
NPR 143.268279
NZD 1.838797
OMR 0.395868
PAB 1.027684
PEN 3.839587
PGK 4.123807
PHP 60.136946
PKR 286.726634
PLN 4.233623
PYG 8103.270327
QAR 3.747311
RON 4.976712
RSD 117.132924
RUB 102.543559
RWF 1452.640384
SAR 3.856182
SBD 8.691576
SCR 14.802136
SDG 617.911966
SEK 11.458194
SGD 1.400934
SHP 0.846763
SLE 23.518705
SLL 21559.581903
SOS 587.348183
SRD 36.092837
STD 21280.422445
SVC 8.992472
SYP 13367.876423
SZL 19.427389
THB 34.88492
TJS 11.201529
TMT 3.608771
TND 3.317389
TOP 2.40801
TRY 36.970847
TTD 6.967773
TWD 33.97931
TZS 2642.377421
UAH 42.980411
UGX 3779.989164
USD 1.02814
UYU 44.545934
UZS 13344.735015
VES 60.011759
VND 26011.942307
VUV 122.062847
WST 2.879642
XAF 657.527056
XAG 0.032561
XAU 0.000364
XCD 2.7786
XDR 0.788197
XOF 657.520645
XPF 119.331742
YER 255.621338
ZAR 19.352883
ZMK 9254.492287
ZMW 28.851893
ZWL 331.060664
  • BCC

    -1.0200

    125.14

    -0.82%

  • RBGPF

    3.8000

    66

    +5.76%

  • CMSD

    -0.0900

    23.75

    -0.38%

  • CMSC

    -0.1200

    23.35

    -0.51%

  • RYCEF

    -0.1400

    7.35

    -1.9%

  • SCS

    -0.4100

    11.07

    -3.7%

  • NGG

    0.6100

    62.01

    +0.98%

  • RIO

    -0.5600

    59.85

    -0.94%

  • BCE

    0.2400

    24.03

    +1%

  • RELX

    -0.0400

    49.85

    -0.08%

  • JRI

    -0.0700

    12.46

    -0.56%

  • VOD

    -0.0500

    8.49

    -0.59%

  • AZN

    -0.9000

    69.86

    -1.29%

  • GSK

    -0.3700

    34.9

    -1.06%

  • BP

    -0.1900

    30.87

    -0.62%

  • BTI

    0.1000

    39.74

    +0.25%

Austria Covid-19 'gargle' tests in expansion drive
Austria Covid-19 'gargle' tests in expansion drive

Austria Covid-19 'gargle' tests in expansion drive

Throughout the day, vans loaded with bags full of Covid PCR test kits arrive at a Vienna laboratory, currently analysing an average of 370,000 tests per day.

Text size:

With more than 144 million tests carried out since the beginning of the pandemic, the Alpine nation of nine million is a leader in Covid testing.

But with the latest Omicron wave sending cases spiralling, health experts and policymakers are asking if widespread testing -- paid by taxpayers' money -- is necessary and efficient.

The Lifebrain laboratory, which accounts for a major part of the country's testing, has been expanding rapidly since it began work just over a year ago on the sprawling ground of a public hospital on Vienna's outskirts.

Under the "Alles Gurgelt" ("Everybody Gargles") system, Viennese can register online, go to a drugstore, pick up a test kit, gargle at home and then drop the kit back and wait for an email with results within 24 hours.

"It's extremely low-threshold," Lifebrain CEO Michael Havel tells AFP.

- Better screening -

Vienna came up with the system in late 2020 to offer better screening for the capital's two million people.

Havel's laboratory, which analyses the "Everybody Gargles" tests, now employs 1,800 people full time and can analyse up to 800,000 tests a day and run 24/7.

A third of its workforce were hired in the last two months alone. The city pays six euros ($6.80) per test to drugstores and others giving them out.

At the laboratory, workers from dozens of countries drag the bags full of test kits through the aisles of the laboratory set up in rooms in several old buildings on the hospital campus.

Scanning the bar codes on the test tubes one-by-one, they place the tubes into trays for analysis in designated high-tech machines. Computers eventually spit out results saying which batches contain positive Covid samples.

Currently mainly receiving tests from Vienna, Havel says he is prepared to expand capacities within Austria. Before the pandemic Lifebrain, which Havel co-founded, was most active providing laboratory work in Italy.

"Everybody Gargles" tests are already part of the rigorous testing regime in schools -- with students tested several times a week -- and Vienna is now looking to expand the system into kindergartens too.

- 'Gas and break at same time' -

Ulrich Elling, a researcher at the Austrian Academy of Sciences, who helped develop the gargling method, said the "Alles Gurgelt" system was "extremely efficient".

"So far this test strategy has made a lot of sense... (but) now with Omicron, everything is different. If you go for 'herd immunity,' then the question is to what extent it makes sense to step on the gas and brake at the same time," he told AFP.

"In autumn I fear that the next wave will come our way... I think testing will only not be necessary anymore once the pandemic is over," he says.

M.Matsumoto--JT