French health officials are to open 20 new Covid-19 testing centres in the Paris region after demand for tests soared at la rentrée, last week’s grand return to work and classes following the long school holidays, reports The Guardian.
The authorities said testing capacity in and around the French capital had risen more than fourfold from 45,000 to 200,000 a week and 1 million people were being tested nationally every week – about 140,000 a day – but there were still queues and delays.
The new diagnostic centres will be open to all those wishing to be tested, but certain hours will be reserved for patients considered a priority and those with Covid-19 symptoms or at risk of contamination.
The health minister, Olivier Véran, has blamed the delays on a surge in demand from people returning from holidays and said the government was hoping to improve access to tests in the next few weeks.
“There is a delay in getting access to laboratories to get tested and queues in Paris and elsewhere; right now it’s taking an average of 3.5 days to get tested,” Véran told BFM TV.
“But the French can be assured: in two, at the latest three, weeks, the access to tests will be easier,” the minister added. He claimed the results were being delivered in 36 hours for 80% of Covid-19 tests.