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		China builds permanent COVID testing stations for life after lockdown
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		 [May 06, 2022] 
		By David Stanway 
 SHANGHAI (Reuters) - China is setting up 
		thousands of permanent PCR testing stations, with 9,000 already 
		completed in Shanghai alone, as authorities seek to "normalise" tough 
		pandemic controls even after the current round of lockdowns end.
 
 At present, nearly 25 million residents in the eastern financial hub of 
		Shanghai remain under some form of lockdown as the city battles China's 
		biggest ever coronavirus outbreak.
 
 But in a bid to head off future flare-ups, municipal authorities have 
		been setting up a system that will make regular COVID-19 testing a 
		permanent feature of everyday life, with other cities taking similar 
		steps.
 
 Of Shanghai's 9,000 testing sites, 5,000 were already operating, 
		vice-mayor Wu Qing said on Friday.
 
 As part of China's "dynamic" zero-COVID strategy, residents of cities 
		including Beijing have already faced frequent tests, and have long grown 
		accustomed to displaying a "health code" mobile app to show they have 
		not visited high-risk areas.
 
 
		
		 
		But the new system will make it a requirement for anyone to have a 
		negative PCR test before entering public spaces. It was unclear how 
		recent the tests needed to be.
 
 The testing stations - located in residential areas, industrial parks, 
		office blocks, and at entrances to train and subway stations - will 
		allow people to be tested in just 15 minutes, officials said.
 
 Beijing, which is battling an outbreak, also said on Thursday that it 
		would implement "normalised" testing and ensure that anyone entering 
		public buildings need to show a negative test result taken in the last 
		seven days.
 
 
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			A medical worker in a protective suit collects a swab sample from a 
			resident for nucleic acid testing, outside a closed entrance of a 
			building during lockdown, amid the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) 
			pandemic, in Shanghai, China, May 5, 2022. REUTERS/Aly Song 
            
			
			
			 The city of Hangzhou, 176 km (109 
			miles) southwest of Shanghai, has also promised to set up 10,000 
			permanent testing stations, and will allow access to its scenic 
			spots only for people with a negative COVID test from the previous 
			48 hours.
 China has doubled down on its zero-COVID rhetoric, saying the 
			strategy remains the most cost-effective and humanitarian way of 
			dealing with the pandemic, but many residents and business groups 
			have raised concerns about the costs of frequent lockdowns.
 Analysts at foreign banks were divided on the 
			merits of the plan for regular testing.
 Goldman Sachs said in a note that regular testing could offer a way 
			out for China as it maintains "zero-COVID" while reducing the 
			economic impact, adding that testing costs would be only a fraction 
			of the country's GDP.
 
 However, Nomura said the benefits of regular PCR testing would be 
			limited, adding that it could cost between 0.9% and 2.3% of GDP, 
			depending on how far the mandate was extended across China's 
			population.
 
 "Much of this spending will likely crowd out fiscal spending on 
			other key areas," it added.
 
 (Reporting by David Stanway; Editing by Simon Cameron-Moore)
 
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