Sample testing devices used in diagnosing the coronavirus are checked on a production line in South Korea (Photo by ED JONES/AFP via Getty Images)

We need antibody testing. Everyone agrees with that — the question is how it can be done.
There are two main kinds of test for Covid-19: PCR tests which tell us who has the disease right now; and antibody or serological testing, which can tell us who’s had it in the past. The Government wants to build testing programmes that can give a reliable answer from a pinprick test in under 20 minutes.
I’ve been banging on about antibody testing in recent pieces. It’s vital for understanding how far the disease has spread throughout the population; without knowing that, we can’t know how deadly it is, or exactly how alarmed we should be.
But other people have been making another point: that if someone has already had the disease, then — hypothetically, hopefully — they ought to be immune to getting it again. If they’re immune to getting it again, they can’t spread it, so they should be allowed back out into the world, to help get the economy started again.
This is the idea behind mooted “immunity passports” for people who’ve tested positive. Tony Blair seems to be talking about something similar when he writes, in the foreword to a report for his Institute for Global Change, that unless we can “track who has the disease and who has had it”, we will remain locked in a situation “in which everyone has to be isolated so that we don’t miss the small number of cases which need to be isolated”.
Immunity passports sound like a good idea. But I wanted to sound a note of extreme caution. I think antibody testing is absolutely vital — for understanding the spread of the disease, at a population level. But using it to establish individual immunity is very different and potentially much more dangerous.
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