Suspected Covid sufferers urged to get tested
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People who think they may have Covid-19 are being urged to get tested and have treatment to avoid being admitted into hospital.
Those in the highest-risk categories have been reminded by NHS bosses that they are entitled to free lateral flow tests.
“Covid-19 has not gone away – it’s still well and truly with us. People are still dying from it and being admitted to hospital," warned Julie Painter, a senior nurse.
It comes as the Black Country Covid Medicines Delivery Service (known as CMDU) celebrates its first anniversary.
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More than 20,000 people across Wolverhampton alone have been identified as being eligible by the CMDU team.
Minority ethnic groups are over-represented in that number - around 42% are from the top 10 groups other than white British, the Royal Wolverhampton NHS Trust said.
The National Institute for Health and Care Excellence (NICE) updated its guidance to add a new group of patients eligible for tests and antiviral treatment if they test positive for the virus.
These include people:
- Aged 85 or over
- With end-stage heart failure who have a long-term ventricular assistance device
- On the organ transplant waiting list
- Aged 70 years and over, or who have a BMI of 35 kg/m2 or more, diabetes or heart failure, and:
- are resident in a care home, or
- are already hospitalised.
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