Lethbridge Herald

Don’t rush rapid testing: Freeland

POLITICIAN­S MUST NOT PRESSURE HEALTH CANADA TO APPROVE RAPID COVID-19 TESTS

- Mia Rabson

The federal government is “lining up advance deals” to buy rapid tests for COVID-19 so as soon as the technology is approved for use in Canada, it can be put to work, says Deputy Prime Minister Chrystia Freeland.

But Health Canada, which has to approve the tests, won’t say anything about when that approval might come, and Freeland said it would be wrong for politician­s to influence the process.

“We are seeing interferen­ce and pressure on regulators around the world and I think we can all see the very dangerous consequenc­es of that kind of an approach,” she said. “So that will not be the approach our government takes.”

The opposition Conservati­ves were less than impressed by her promise, pointing out that the government claimed in March that rapid testing was a top priority.

“Half a year and half a trillion dollars later Canadian families still have to wait in line for hours, sometimes days, to get tested,” said deputy Conservati­ve leader Candice Bergen in the House of Commons Thursday.

She said many people can’t afford to take days off work to wait for tests.

Online chat rooms and social media groups are awash in questions and complaints from Canadians struggling to get tested for the virus that causes COVID19. Those who do get through a testing line are reporting waits of up to a week to get results because labs are so backed up.

Health Canada regulates both the sale and importatio­n of any medical devices, tests or treatments for COVID-19. It has already approved nearly three dozen different tests to diagnose it, but all of them use either a swab from the back of the nose and throat, or a saliva sample, and have to be processed in a lab.

Once the test is run it takes several hours to get results but sending those results back to a patient usually takes more than a day.

Rapid tests can produce results in as little as five minutes, right in the same spot where the throat sample, blood sample or saliva sample is collected. They aren’t considered to be as accurate as the genetic tests, but several countries have approved them, including Japan and the United States.

Some Canadian epidemiolo­gists argue they would be good as surveillan­ce tools to get tests done quickly on people who have symptoms of COVID-19 or possible exposures to known cases. If a rapid test comes up positive it can then be confirmed by the more reliable molecular version.

At least 14 rapid devices are under review by Health Canada but the department’s spokesman says he cannot comment on the status of the applicatio­ns during the scientific assessment process.

The department does have an online list of devices for which it has received applicatio­ns, including the name of the device, the manufactur­er, and the type of test. All are show as “under review” or their entries say Health Canada is awaiting more informatio­n.

One rapid test was approved in May but subsequent­ly pulled back after field testing didn’t go as hoped.

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