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Turkey struggles to test for coronavirus after it sent its test kits to the US
People wear face masks in Istanbul, Turkey. (File photo Reuters)

A week after sending half a million coronavirus test kits to the United States, Turkey is struggling to ramp up it's testing for the disease as doctors warn the country has reached a crossroads in containing the fast-growing outbreak. to test for coronavirus


Turkey reported its first infection just over two weeks ago, among the last big nations to do so.


Since then, a surge in cases to 3,629 has outstripped rates in most other countries and the government has fallen short of its target to conduct 10,000 tests per day.


In interviews with Reuters, experts have urged stronger stay-at-home orders and some said it was risky for Ankara to export 500,000 kits to the United States only to turn around and order a million more from China.


“Our test numbers are low. We were certainly not prepared. Ready countries must have high test numbers,” said Sinan Adiyaman, chairman of the Turkish Medics Association (TTB).


The government has said it took timely measures to delay the outbreak.


But Adiyaman said Turkey was slow on some steps, including suspending sports leagues and quarantining those coming from abroad, especially the thousands returning this month from an

Umrah pilgrimage.


“Around 200,000 people arrived from abroad since the outbreak began, and they were just given a simple fever test and released across Turkey in an uncontrolled manner,” he said. “You cannot fight a pandemic this way.”


The coronavirus has so far killed 75 people in Turkey, an international crossroads with one of the world’s biggest airports in Istanbul.


About 40,000 tests have been done including about 7,000 in the last 24 hours, suggesting Turkey is edging toward the target Health Minister Fahrettin Koca set out a week ago, but only two-thirds of the way there. South Korea, seen as the global leader, does more tests each day than Turkey’s total.


To contain the virus, Ankara has closed schools, cafes, and bars, banned mass prayers, and suspended sports matches and flights. President Tayyip Erdogan said Turkey, which has a

population of about 83 million, would overcome the outbreak in two to three weeks. to test for coronavirus


Mustafa Cankurtaran, head of geriatrics at the Hacettepe University Faculty of Medicine, said his team is following the national guidelines, testing only “risky” patients with cough and fever. But next month will be critical since the outbreak will widen, he said. levant


source: Reuters levant