Mandatory RAT Upon Arrival, RTPCR Test for Positive Result; SAI Issues Fresh SOPs Amid Rising Covid Cases
Mandatory RAT Upon Arrival, RTPCR Test for Positive Result; SAI Issues Fresh SOPs Amid Rising Covid Cases
Proper isolation facilities are being earmarked for COVID positive or symptomatic athletes across the camps and the facilities would be sanitised twice a day.

The Sports Authority of India (SAI) has come up with fresh Standard Operating Procedures (SOPs) to deal with the drastic rise in the Covid cases, mostly owing to the Omicron variant. These measures will be strictly implemented at the various National Centres of Excellence (NCOE) as well as the ongoing national coaching camps.

Athletes will be required to undergo Rapid Antigen Test (RAT) upon arrival at national camps and training centres; this was one of the fresh SOPs announced by the SAI on Wednesday.

“If the test comes negative, they will train and dine separately until the sixth day of joining. A repeat of the RAT would take place on the fifth day,” SAI stated in a press release.

“The ones who get a positive result would undergo a RTPCR test and be treated in isolation, while the athletes testing negative would continue normal training,” it added.

The SOPs that SAI had issued before the Tokyo Olympics last year, required an athlete to take an RT-PCR test within 72 hours before arrival at camp with a negative report.

Proper isolation facilities are being earmarked for COVID positive or symptomatic athletes across the camps and the facilities would be sanitised twice a day.

There will also be a micro bio-bubble, where the athletes will be divided into small groups for training and dining. The athletes have also been strictly asked to avoid interacting with other groups.

Besides, random testing of athletes, coaches, support staff and non-residential staff in the NCOE will be carries out once every 15 days.

“It has also been recommended that athletes would be participating in only those competitions recommended by the respective National Sports Federations (NSFs) and the SAI HQ officials,” the nodal sports body said in a release.

“For invitational tournaments and non-Olympic qualifying events, recommendations would be made by the respective Regional Directors (RDs) of the NCOEs.”

It is also to be noted that guidelines from the respective state governments will supersede these SOPs in those particular states, SAI stated.

Last year, few national camps were disrupted owing to breakout of COVID cases, including boxing in Patiala and New Delhi, and camps in Bhopal and Bengaluru, where the hockey teams were training.

The SAI was forced to take this step after as many as 24 sportspersons and 12 support staff members tested positive for the virus at the SAI’s Bhopal centre.

Before that, in 2020, several men’s freestyle and Greco-Roman wrestlers had tested positive for the virus after reporting to a national camp at the SAI Sonepat centre.

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