IATA top doctor says airlines can’t afford to wait for vaccine

Bloomberg Updated - September 04, 2020 at 01:46 PM.

IATA says it doesn’t see passenger traffic recovering until at least 2024; expects airlines to lose over $84 bn this year

Mumbai, 08/05/2017: Crow sits calmly on the wall besides the airplanes which stand in line before taking off on the runway at Mumbai Airport. Chhatrapati Shivaji International Airport in Mumbai handles between 45 to 48 aircraft per hour or between 880 to 900 flights per day. The airport is saturated because of its single runway operations and encroachment by slums. Constant efforts are being made towards reducing runway occupancy time, so that more flights can operate. (Picture for SUNDAY Edition) Photo: Emmanual Yogini

The airline industry can’t afford to wait for a vaccine. That’s the message from the International Air Transport Association’s chief medical adviser, David Powell.

On top of face masks, regular hand washing and sanitising of high-touch surfaces, carriers should work with regulators to introduce reliable coronavirus testing systems for passengers before they board in order to get people back on planes.

“The ideal protection is to avoid people who are infectious,” Powell said in an interview with Bloomberg News. “We need a test that’s reliable and fast enough and that’s able to be done in huge numbers.”

Right now, that’s a tall order. Manufacturers globally are struggling to meet Covid-19 test-kit demand. And the multiple tests that do exist can often sow more confusion than certainty.

Just last month a spat erupted between Singapore and China after the latter found infectious passengers on a flight from the island nation. Singapore said most of the people in question had recovered but may continue to shed viral fragments for weeks or even months leading to a positive test result.

With almost no one travelling for business or leisure, airlines are doing everything they can to avoid collapse. IATA, which represents 290 carriers globally, has said it doesn’t see passenger traffic recovering until at least 2024, and it expects airlines to lose more than $84 billion this year alone.

As scientists’ understanding of SARS-CoV-2 develops, the medical profession’s stance has shifted. In early February, when Covid-19 was still a big question mark in most people’s minds, Powell said the best way to avoid infection was frequent hand washing rather than wearing a mask. By May, the recommendation on face coverings was universal.

“We recognise that a percentage of Covid-19 cases can be asymptomatic,” Powell said earlier this week. “That’s the reason for that change in position.”

Published on September 4, 2020 08:13