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Olive oil truck spills slick load on Basel highway

An Italian semi-trailer truck carrying 22 tonnes of olive oil overturned on the A-2 Highway in the canton of Basel-Country on Tuesday night.

Olive oil truck spills slick load on Basel highway
Photo: Basel-Country cantonal police

The truck slid into the opposite lane leading to collisions with four other vehicles in the crash that occurred shortly after 8pm at Pratteln, cantonal police said.

The driver of the Italian truck was seriously injured, while a woman driving a car in the opposite direction suffered minor injuries, police said.

The truck, travelling toward Pratteln, crashed through the median of the six-lane highway 400 metres after a rest stop for reasons not explained, police said.
 
The truck driver and the woman motorist were both taken to hospital.

Debris from the crash was scattered over a 100-metre area and 14 tonnes of olive oil spilled onto the road making for “extremely slippery conditions,” police said.

Officials estimated damage in the hundreds of thousands of francs.

Police said there was no threat to the environment from the spill.

Salvage and cleaning operations were expected to continue until at least 5am Wednesday, blocking the highway.

A total of 100 workers were involved in the mop-up operation.

Traffic was diverted to an alternate route.

The accident occurred three days after a bus carrying members of the Marcus Miller Band jazz group overturned on the same highway, killing the driver.

Eleven members of the band, including MIller, a Grammy-Award winning bassist, were injured, along with another driver.
 

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Denmark close to rolling out coronavirus immunity tests: SSI

The Danish health agency SSI hopes to soon approve coronavirus antibody tests which will show whether those who suspect they've had the disease are immune and can rejoin the workforce.

Denmark close to rolling out coronavirus immunity tests: SSI
An antibody test developed by the Dutch company Sensitest. Photo: Robin Utrecht/AFP/Ritzau Scanpix
“We're not there right now, but we're close,” Anders Fomsgaard, the agency's head doctor, told the Politiken newspaper. “I dare not set a date for when the first antibody tests can come out, but my clear expectation is that it will happen before the epidemic culminates.”
 
Karen Angeliki Krogfelt, professor of medical microbiology at Roskilde University, is working with Statens Serum Institute (SSI) to check the accuracy of the Chinese-made finger-prick blood tests, to determine if they can be used by the Danish authorities. 
 
These so-called 'serologic tests' check for the antibodies produced by the body to defend against the coronavirus virus, rather than testing whether someone is currently infected. 
 
“When people have a high antibody level, they have a very hard time getting infected again for a period of up to two years,” Krogfelt told the newspaper. “They can then be sent back to work without much risk of them becoming infected or spreading the infection to others, as they are now more resilient.” 
 
Knut Borch-Johnsen, Deputy Director at Holbæk hospital, said that such tests would be invaluable. 
 
“Today, I have to send staff home even if they have very mild symptoms because it might be coronavirus. If we knew they were immune, then some of them could stay at work,” he told the newspaper. 
 
The SSI project is being mirrored by governments across the world.
 
On Monday, Deborah Birx from the White House Coronavirus Task Force said the the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) hoped to approve a test within weeks, while the UK has already purchased 3.5m tests, and hopes to send them out to people's homes within weeks. 
 
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