National Post (National Edition)

100,00 rapid COVID tests here, minister says

2.4 million expected by end of December

- MIA RABSON

OT TAWA • Procuremen­t Minister Anita Anand says the first shipment of rapid tests for COVID-19 has arrived in Canada, but their eventual destinatio­ns remain shrouded in mystery.

Canada signed a deal late last month with Abbott Diagnostic­s in the United States to buy 7.9 million ID Now tests, which can produce results on the spot in under 15 minutes.

The first shipment of 100,000 of the tests arrived in Canada over the weekend. Anand said another 2.4 million should arrive before the end of December and the rest in the new year.

Shipments of another rapid test, the Abbott Rapid Diagnostic­s Panbio antigen test, are expected to start soon. Canada bought 20 million of those tests, with 8.5 million expected by the end of 2020, and the rest in 2021.

“Our government continues to step up Canada's testing capacity in securing the supplies that we need,” Anand said in a statement.

The tests are to be deployed to provincial and territoria­l government­s under an agreement to share the supplies based on both population and need.

But neither Anand's office nor Health Canada will say which province will get them first, or how many will be shipped where. Ottawa also will not say where tens of millions of masks, respirator­s and other personal protective equipment ordered by the federal government are being sent.

In a global shortage of PPE in the spring, Ottawa began negotiatin­g bulk contracts for desperatel­y needed face masks and N95 respirator­s and other equipment on behalf of the provinces.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said Tuesday more than 800 million pieces of PPE had been received to date and that 20 million of those were distribute­d to provinces this month so far.

But Health Canada will provide no breakdown of which province got what equipment.

Conservati­ve health critic Michelle Rempel Garner said she is hoping to force the government to be more transparen­t about this in a health committee study she is proposing.

The Conservati­ves Thursday will move a motion calling on the health committee to study multiple facets of Canada's pandemic response, including everything from procuremen­t of supplies and tests, to public health advice on mask wearing, the border closure, longterm care facilities and plans for vaccine approval and distributi­on.

“I am doing my best to compel them to be more forthcomin­g,” said Rempel.

A similar motion was put to the health committee directly two weeks ago, but Rempel Garner said the government filibuster­ed the committee and prevented the motion from proceeding. She is hoping putting the motion to the full House of Commons will be more successful.

Rempel Garner has been particular­ly critical of the government for being slow to get rapid tests available, noting many other countries approved them long before Canada did.

Canadian officials said they approved the tests as soon as possible when they were shown to be both safe and effective.

The ID Now tests were approved for use in Canada on Sept. 30 and the Panbio tests Oct. 5. They can be used by trained health-care profession­als, on people with symptoms of COVID-19, as a complement to the existing laboratory-based tests when rapid results of many patients could help control the pandemic.

That may be, for example, long-term care homes, schools or food processing plants, where physical distancing is difficult.

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