
24 June 2021
All local recommended safety guidelines followed at the time of interview.
Danish mink farmers began to notice that their animals were showing signs of respiratory illness in June 2020. The mink had gotten COVID-19 from humans, and they weren’t the only animals to be infected by SARS-CoV-2: Cats, dogs, and even zoo animals have tested positive. Then the virus leaped from the mink back to us. This triggered Denmark to make some extraordinary choices to keep the pandemic – and viral mutants – at bay.
icon-cta-blockquote2
Mutations are arising all over, all the time.
Dr. Mette Christiansen, head of the Diagnostic NGS Core Facility, Department of Molecular Medicine (MOMA), Aarhus University Hospital
icon-cta-blockquote2
When coronavirus is in immunocompromised patients for a longer period, then you see more detrimental mutations might arise.
Dr. Mette Christiansen, head of the Diagnostic NGS Core Facility, Molecular Medicine (MOMA), Aarhus University hospital
icon-cta-blockquote2
The importance of sequencing all positive cases is that you really have a good picture of what's going on with the pandemic.
Dr. Mette Christiansen, head of the Diagnostic NGS Core Facility, Department of Molecular Medicine (MOMA), Aarhus University Hospital
Explore innovative QIAseq NGS solutions for genomic surveillance of SARS-CoV-2
Accelerate SARS-CoV-2 genomic surveillance and detect emerging variants with rapid, high – throughput whole genome sequencing
Other stories
-
Molecular Testing in Travel MedicineWhen lockdown began to ease in the UK, the creatives were on the front line to get back to work. But how can you test the hundreds of individuals that make up a film crew?
-
Latest information on SARS-CoV-2Find all resources covering diagnostic testing, research solutions and latest news in one place.
-
Our customer StoriesExplore our digital magazine full of customer stories and videos on scientific breakthroughs and healthcare advances.