Critics say home tests may be unreliable, might delay necessary treatment and could soak up scarce resources. Proponents say they could in the near future play a critical role in tracking COVID-19.
For all three companies, the kits themselves were simply nasal or cheek swabs with written instructions. They had made a connection to laboratories to test the samples and arranged for overnight shipping. A telemedicine doctor would screen consumers and give advice if the test came back positive.
, Dr. Shantanu Nundy – chief medical officer at the health-benefits company Accolade Health – advocated for research to determine whether at-home test kits could be effective for COVID-19. SCAN has received approval for at-home test kits from the Washington Department of Health. But in response to questions, a spokesman said SCAN is not a clinical service. It is a research initiative to better understand the spread of novel coronavirus. It takes samples from people for this research.that he expects government websites soon to screen patients for coronavirus exposure and send those who meet criteria to kiosks, where they would swab their own nostrils under supervision.
“I think there is a big difference between a doctor who knows you and a doctor who is operating from a script,” Campbell said. That’s the route taken by Scanwell, a startup seeking emergency approval from the FDA to roll out a test already being used in China. Similar technology was just purchased by the United Kingdom to provide 7 million people with testing kits.
“The problem here is the federal government had a really botched rollout of testing in general," Patel said, "which is why you ended up with a bunch of commercial labs and then startups that are direct to consumer labs being in this state."Everlywell, however, has not given up.
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