COVID-19 test kits in Spain fail to get China license
The company that provided COVID-19 test kits to Spain did not get the license from China’s authorities on medicines for selling its products, the Chinese Embassy to Spain said on its Twitter account in response to claims that these test kits were “substandard.”
The Spanish government announced plans to return 9,000 “quick result” test kits to China as they were deemed “substandard,” El Pais reported.
The purchase of these test kits has nothing to do with the important purchases that Spain has made based on the recent list of companies officially recommended by the Chinese government to deal with COVID-19, the embassy wrote on its
Twitter account in Spanish.
Spain announced on Wednesday that it had bought $467 million in medical supplies from China, including 5.5 million test kits. The Spanish government issued another statement on Thursday, saying that the test kits involved in the incident are not the ones it bought from the Chinese government – they were imported by a Spanish supplier from a Chinese manufacturer. These products have CE markings and could be sold in the EU.
The CE marking is a certification stamp that indicates conformity with health, safety, and environmental protection standards for products sold within the European Economic Area.
The market supervision administration in Shenzhen has started an investigation into the company, it announced in a notice released Friday.
The test kits were produced by Shenzhen Bioeasy Biotechnology based in South China’s Guangdong Province. The company claimed on its WeChat account that the low sensitivity of the test kits used in Spain was due to the users not following the instructions properly in the process of taking samples.
Bioeasy said that it has made an instructional video and related instruction cards and contacted the Spanish side on how to deal with the samples.