National Post

Feds plan to buy more than 20M rapid antigen tests

Results for COVID-19 in 15 minutes

- Mia Rabson

OT TAWA • Procuremen­t Minister Anita Anand says Canada is buying more than 20 million of the rapid antigen tests for COVID-19 approved by Health Canada Tuesday.

Abbott Rapid Diagnostic­s in Germany got the green light from Health Canada to sell its Panbio antigen rapid test in Canada on Tuesday morning.

Canada has also signed a contract with Abbott that will see the company ship 20.5 million of the ruler- sized test devices to Canada.

This approval comes a week after Health Canada authorized the use of another rapid test from Abbott Diagnostic­s in the United States.

That test, the ID Now kit, can provide results in as little as 13 minutes on the spot where the patient is tested. The ID Now test looks for the genetic material of the novel coronaviru­s that causes COVID-19.

The Panbio test uses antigen technology, and can produce results in less than 15 minutes. Antigens are unique molecules found on the outside of a particular virus.

Canada is buying 7.9 million of the ID Now tests, and another 3,800 of the analyzer boxes that are needed to run the results. The Panbio test does not need an analyzer box, and looks somewhat like a pregnancy test, with a little window on a stick that shows positive or negative results.

Health Canada will distribute both tests to provincial and territoria­l government­s through an allocation agreement that is supposed to ensure equitable distributi­on that takes into account each jurisdicti­on’s need.

Health Canada will not say how many of each test will be sent to which province or when.

About 2.5 million of the ID Now tests are expected by the end of the year, with the first delivery to take place next week.

Conservati­ve Leader Erin O’toole said in the House of Commons Monday the government promised rapid tests six months ago, hitting a recurring theme in Tory questions to the Liberals.

“Their slow response is impacting millions of Canadians,” he said. “In Quebec, it is the long lineups. In Ontario, it is the labs that are stretched to the limit. In Manitoba, it is confusion over buying rapid tests. When is the prime minister going to take the help of Canadians seriously and roll out a real plan for rapid testing?”

Deputy Prime Minister Chrystia Freeland said she, too, wants to see more rapid tests in this country.

“I share the member opposite’s view that rapid testing is absolutely essential to our health,” she said. “It is absolutely essential to our economic recovery.”

The ID Now tests came under some scrutiny in the U. S. over the weekend when it was revealed they were used at the White House to test staff almost daily.

Dr. Supriya Sharma, the senior medical adviser to the deputy minister of health, said in an interview that in Canada the tests are approved only for use on patients who are showing symptoms of COVID-19, and only within the first seven days after symptoms appear.

ABSOLUTELY ESSENTIAL TO OUR ECONOMIC RECOVERY.

 ?? JORGE GUERERO / AFP via Gett y Imag es ?? The Panbio test uses antigen technology, and can produce results in less than 15 minutes. Antigens are unique molecules found on the outside of a particular virus.
JORGE GUERERO / AFP via Gett y Imag es The Panbio test uses antigen technology, and can produce results in less than 15 minutes. Antigens are unique molecules found on the outside of a particular virus.

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