Covid testing for university students has officially begun, as they prepare to make their way home for Christmas, safely.

Asymptomatic testing sites (ATS) have been launched at University of Cumbria's Carlisle, Ambleside and Lancaster campuses as part of the government's UK-wide drive to increase the availability of mass testing.

The university has worked with NHS Test and Trace to set up on-campus testing sites, allowing students to be tested during the first week of December, making sure they are Covid-free when returning home for Christmas.

Students are encouraged to get tested twice during the first week of the month, using Lateral Flow Devices.

If they receive two negative tests, they are advised to return home immediately.

If a positive test is confirmed, they will have to isolate for 10 days – giving them enough time to still return home for the holiday.

Before travelling, students are advised to book travel in advance, avoid busy times and routes and check their journey in advance to avoid disruptions.

All students are urged to get tested if it is available at their university to help protect themselves and their friends, families and home communities as safe as possible when returning home this Christmas.

A University of Cumbria spokesperson said: “The health and wellbeing our of staff and students continues to be our top priority and, as a caring and compassionate university, we are supporting this initiative as we have a duty to help as much as we can with all efforts to minimise infection.

“The university has been working closely with the Government’s Department for Health and Social Care (DHSC) to host new NHS Test and Trace centres at its campuses in Carlisle, Ambleside and Lancaster, offering staff and students free Lateral Flow tests.

“This testing programme is mainly intended to help students travelling back to their permanent homes for the holidays, where a negative test less than 24 hours before travel gives some reassurance.

“The university has plans in place to make sure students are supported while they are self-isolating with essential supplies, regular check-ins and access to health and wellbeing services.”

Lateral flow devices do not require a laboratory to process the test, and processing these tests can be conducted at a dedicated testing site by trained personnel, rapidly turning around results within an hour.

Use of lateral flow tests could significantly improve the detection of positive cases, so people can isolate themselves and prevent the spread of the disease.

Asymptomatic testing will help to protect those at high risk, find the virus and help enable us to go back to as normal a way of life as possible.

Health Minister, Lord Bethell, said: “We’ve already come so far since first setting up a national testing programme at an unprecedented pace to help counter Covid-19, but we continue to strive to go further, faster.

“Innovations such as lateral flow technology hold the key to the next phase of our ambition to see mass, rapid testing available to people across the country.

“I’m delighted that universities are working with us to use lateral flow technology, and I look forward to seeing the fruits of their labour, in helping students return home for Christmas and to return to a normal way of life as soon as possible.”

Baroness Dido Harding, interim executive chair of the National Institute for Health Protection, said: “NHS Test and Trace continues to play a leading role in the fight against Covid-19 with over 32 million tests processed so far.

“The work of University of Cumbria in supporting this testing programme will be essential in helping us explore the benefits of new lateral flow technology.

“This ATS is one of many which will lay the foundations for the next phase of NHS Test and Trace – mass testing – which will allow us to test even more people, even more quickly.”

Anyone testing positive for the virus will be contacted by NHS Test and Trace to help them track their contacts, helping people to identify who they may have been in close contact with and protecting others from further transmission.

Close contacts of those testing positive will also hear from NHS Test and Trace, asking them to stay at home for 14 days to prevent them from unknowingly spreading the virus.

Anyone with symptoms should follow the guidance online on how to book a PCR test, at www.gov.uk/get-coronavirus-test – or call 119.

Universities Minister Michelle Donelan added: “We are committed to get students back to their loved ones for the Christmas holidays as safely as possible, after this challenging year.

“Our plans already minimise the risk of students moving at the end of term, through staggered departure dates in the ‘student travel window’.

"But testing will offer further assurances that students can keep their families safe this winter, and I urge all students who can to take the tests on offer.”

For more information on how and where students can get tested, visit cumbria.ac.uk/coronavirus/testing.