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View Full Version : Emirates Airline Begins Conducting Rapid COVID-19 Tests For Boarding Passengers


Oasis
16th Apr 2020, 04:21
Blood test, takes 10 minutes.
This is the way forward til there is a vaccine. If you can guarantee no one on board has the virus, you can reopen air-routes and get passengers to travel in close proximity once again without fear of infection.
Please tell me CX is all over this as we speak.

.npr.org/sections/coronavirus-live-updates/2020/04/15/834999076/emirates-airlines-begins-conducting-rapid-covid-19-tests-for-boarding-passengers

"Emirates Airline In a move that could be a step toward making air travel palatable to the public again, Emirates Airline has begun conducing rapid-on site COVID-19 for passengers.

The testing began with passengers on a flight from Dubai to Tunisia on Wednesday. The analysis is a blood test with results within 10 minutes. The airline says it is the first to roll out rapid testing.

Emirates says it is working to scale up testing capabilities and extend it to other flights. It says its testing could also be used to provide confirmation for Emirates passengers traveling to countries that require COVID-19 test certificates.

The testing accompanies other changes on Emirates. Passengers are now required to wear masks throughout boarding and flight. Gone are in-flight magazines, and carry-on luggage isn't permitted – only small items like handbags and briefcases.

Etihad Airways, which is also based in the United Arab Emirates, said last week that it is trialing new kiosks that can monitor the temperature, heart rate and respiratory rate of a person checking in for a flight or dropping a bag. If there are signs of illness, the kiosk will suspend the check-in or drop-off and alert a staff member. The kiosks are being tested at the airport in Abu Dhabi.
"This technology is not designed or intended to diagnose medical conditions," said Etihad's Vice President Hub and Midfield Operations, Joerg Oppermann. "It is an early warning indicator which will help to identify people with general symptoms, so that they can be further assessed by medical experts, potentially preventing the spread of some conditions to others preparing to board flights to multiple destinations."

The airline industry has been hit hard by a steep decline in demand due to the coronavirus pandemic. The number of people flying in the U.S. is down 95% since the beginning of March."

jumbobelle
17th Apr 2020, 12:10
The tests are reported as 30-80% reliable i.e. hit and miss. If they were reliable, every airline in the world would be doing it tomorrow. And while the physical checks will pick up some unfortunate people, they won't pick up asymptomatic passengers, as statements like "not designed or intended to diagnose medical conditions" and "general symptoms" point to.

Flying Clog
17th Apr 2020, 16:26
An Emirates publicity stunt.

cxorcist
17th Apr 2020, 16:39
An Emirates publicity stunt.
100% agree. Hollow and fake, just like Dubai.

FreemaninHK
17th Apr 2020, 19:58
100% agree. Hollow and fake, just like Dubai.

They will get better.. and I will be the way forward. I agree about DXB.. but government wanting pax screening before and maybe after flights is something coming I fear.

cxorcist
18th Apr 2020, 19:56
They will get better.. and I will be the way forward. I agree about DXB.. but government wanting pax screening before and maybe after flights is something coming I fear.
What we should not and cannot have is “window dressing” wrt passenger testing. Yes, there should be temperature scans, but not testing pre-departure at the airport. Unless the tests are fast, reliable, and affordable; there is no point. Think of all the “security” layers to navigate at the airport, and now add health screening with a swab and analysis. Forget about it, not going to happen.

At some point, people are just going to have to accept risk if they want to travel. In many regards, the reason we are now bordering on a global depression is because the world has become, in my mind, excessively risk averse. We are adverse to low probabilities and ignore many higher risk probabilities. It’s just plain dumb. We have to get our priorities right.

In many regards, the western world is playing right into the hands of autocrats who will pretend they can keep us “safe”. Don’t fall for it!

mngmt mole
18th Apr 2020, 22:24
Well said Cxorcist. Nailed it. This will prove to be the most epic mass hysteria event in modern history. Hard to believe that the Brits/USA won WW2, because if it was the present generation we would have all been speaking German by 45'

Flex88
19th Apr 2020, 16:08
Blood test, takes 10 minutes.
This is the way forward til there is a vaccine. If you can guarantee no one on board has the virus, you can reopen air-routes and get passengers to travel in close proximity once again without fear of infection.
Please tell me CX is all over this as we speak.

.npr.org/sections/coronavirus-live-updates/2020/04/15/834999076/emirates-airlines-begins-conducting-rapid-covid-19-tests-for-boarding-passengers

"Emirates Airline In a move that could be a step toward making air travel palatable to the public again, Emirates Airline has begun conducing rapid-on site COVID-19 for passengers.

The testing began with passengers on a flight from Dubai to Tunisia on Wednesday. The analysis is a blood test with results within 10 minutes. The airline says it is the first to roll out rapid testing.

Emirates says it is working to scale up testing capabilities and extend it to other flights. It says its testing could also be used to provide confirmation for Emirates passengers traveling to countries that require COVID-19 test certificates.

The testing accompanies other changes on Emirates. Passengers are now required to wear masks throughout boarding and flight. Gone are in-flight magazines, and carry-on luggage isn't permitted – only small items like handbags and briefcases.

Etihad Airways, which is also based in the United Arab Emirates, said last week that it is trialing new kiosks that can monitor the temperature, heart rate and respiratory rate of a person checking in for a flight or dropping a bag. If there are signs of illness, the kiosk will suspend the check-in or drop-off and alert a staff member. The kiosks are being tested at the airport in Abu Dhabi.
"This technology is not designed or intended to diagnose medical conditions," said Etihad's Vice President Hub and Midfield Operations, Joerg Oppermann. "It is an early warning indicator which will help to identify people with general symptoms, so that they can be further assessed by medical experts, potentially preventing the spread of some conditions to others preparing to board flights to multiple destinations."

The airline industry has been hit hard by a steep decline in demand due to the coronavirus pandemic. The number of people flying in the U.S. is down 95% since the beginning of March."


What passengers ???
Estimates now are "guessing" that 1 YEAR from now, pax levels "optimistically" would be 50% of what they were.. I personally think even that is optimistic... Make plans !!!