Wouldn't it be nice if there were a $5 test that works in minutes, and can find asymptomatic people who might transmit covid? Imagine how many schools, businesses, restaurants, weddings, churches, and so forth could safely open with such a thing. Imagine how much the reproduction rate of the virus could be crushed.
There is! And it's sitting on shelves, one of the biggest casualties of the US federal monopoly on this simplest of all consumer goods. From detailed Wall Street Journal coverage:
“Antigen testing is one of the most powerful tools we have to hasten control to normalcy,” said Richard Pescatore, associate state medical director at the Delaware Department of Health and Social Services...
The tests can quickly help determine whether someone is infectious. The tests detect cases by searching for pieces of proteins from the virus. They deliver results in minutes.
Among the first rapid antigen tests cleared by regulators was the BinaxNOW, which is made by Abbott Laboratories, costs $5 and doesn’t require any equipment.
Costs $5 to the federal government. Imagine if Abbott could send it to you via Amazon or ship it in bulk to Wal Mart. Alas, rather than simply sell the tests on the open market, the federal government is the monopoly buyer, shipped them to states, and they sit on shelves:
The U.S. government distributed millions of fast-acting tests for diagnosing coronavirus infections at the end of last year to help tamp down outbreaks in nursing homes and prisons and allow schools to reopen.
But some states haven’t used many of the tests, due to logistical hurdles and accuracy concerns, squandering a valuable tool for managing the pandemic. The first batches, shipped to states in September, are approaching their six-month expiration dates.
At least 32 million of the 142 million BinaxNOW rapid Covid-19 tests distributed by the U.S. government to states starting last year weren’t used as of early February, according to a Wall Street Journal review of their inventories.
The central problem remains conceptual, as I see it. You need a very accurate test to treat a sick patient. A much less accurate, but cheap and fast test is better to see who is contagious and stop the spread of the disease. This is a mental block that too many in the game can't seem to get over.
Studies now suggest rapid antigen tests like BinaxNOW miss more cases than laboratory-based tests that take more time to work, but are able to detect the virus among people who are most infectious. That can help speed up contact-tracing and containment efforts.
Some epidemiologists describe them as “contagiousness tests.” They are also most effective when used repeatedly on the same population, according to health authorities.
What's stopping it up?
Some state health officials said they were reluctant to use the tests for regular, continuous screening because they didn’t know whether they would get a continuing supply. Others were already using tests from other companies.
Some facilities such as schools haven’t used the tests because of the amount of training staff needed, regulatory waivers that facilities must have to use the tests, and the time it takes to manually report results.
Other states delayed using the tests as they built the technology needed to easily report the results to public-health authorities and trained school nurses, nursing home staff and others to administer them.
Virginia spent months training people to administer tests, ensuring facilities have clearance to use them and creating a system to report results, said Parham Jaberi, chief deputy health commissioner.
The state distributed 949,000 of the 2.24 million tests it received to hospitals and other sites, Dr. Jaberi said.
Because the tests are most useful in outbreak situations or when used repeatedly, some state health officials also say they have tried to keep a reserve on hand and space out distribution over time.
Clemens Hong, Los Angeles County’s co-lead of Covid-19 testing, said he aims to add more rapid testing soon because fast positive results are helpful for quicker contact tracing.
Yet he said he is concerned about the tests’ accuracy, which is why the county, during the surge in cases around the winter holidays, gave priority to broadening access to the lab-based tests that take longer to work. The county runs the rapid tests and lab-based tests simultaneously to confirm the results.
About half of the 11.9 million BinaxNOW tests sent to California have been used, according to the state.
I quote at length so you can see the muddy thinking here. Good thing there wasn't an exponentially growing pandemic on so there was time for all this bureaucracy!
The root problem: Bought by the federal government, given to states, given out by governments. The point of testing is to get the economy going.
Really, would just allowing Abbott to sell the tests on the open market not have produced a 100 times better result?
from The Grumpy Economist https://ift.tt/3bargq9
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