Loss of taste or smell are now official sypmtoms of covid-19, chief medical officer confirms
LONDON: The United Kingdom has added the loss of smell and taste to its official list of COVID-19 symptoms including fever and new continuous cough – a step that it hopes could help pick up about 2 percent more cases of the novel coronavirus.
Today the Chief Medical Officers for England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland have issued updated advice on #coronavirus symptoms.
Self-isolate if you develop:
➡️ a new continuous cough
➡️ fever
➡️ loss/change in your normal sense of smell or tastehttps://t.co/SW6HlJNiN1 pic.twitter.com/MVMDI62UIq— Department of Health and Social Care (@DHSCgovuk) May 18, 2020
The change, announced by Professor Jonathan Van-Tam, England’s deputy chief medical officer, came after scientists advising the government decided it could help pick up more cases if included in the basic case definition, Reuters news reported.
“Our basic case definition, which has for some time been new continuous cough or fever, will change to new continuous cough or fever or anosmia,” Van-Tam, who previously worked at SmithKline Beecham, Roche and Aventis Pasteur, told reporters.
For the purposes of public messaging, anosmia – the loss of smell – will be defined as a loss of smell and taste as the two are very closely linked in a neurological sense, Van-Tam said.
By adding anosmia the sensitivity of new case pick up could increase to 93 percent from 91 percent with just new cough and fever, Van-Tam said.
Other possible symptoms of COVID-19 include fatigue, diarrhea, abdominal pain, or loss of appetite but have not been included in the basic case definition. Live mint reported.
When asked why the United Kingdom has lagged other countries in including the loss of smell in its official list, Van-Tam said:
“The question is: Which of those symptoms actually make the interception of cases better or worse?”
Van-Tam said the government’s New and Emerging Respiratory Virus Threats Advisory Group, or NERVTAG, had first looked at anosmia on March 27 but had kept it under review until a few days ago when the new advice was approved by the United Kingdom’s top clinicians group.
Facebook Comments