Irish Daily Mail

A 12-minute Covid testing service on sale soon in Boots

- By Ruth Sunderland news@dailymail.ie

BOOTS chemists are launching a coronaviru­s testing service – with results available in just 12 minutes.

The high- speed test has proved 97% accurate in trials and should be available i n Britain within a fortnight – but it is not yet know when it would be on sale here.

Chief executive Sebastian James said it was the first step toward mass testing for shops and chemists.

Boots will initially charge £120 (€130) but this is likely to fall if demand grows.

The tests are aimed at those who have no symptoms but are seeking peace of mind. Anyone who suspects that they have Covid-19 is advised to go to a health service testing station.

Meanwhile, the scientist leading the developmen­t of a vaccine at Britain’s Oxford University said it was likely to reach key health workers and high-risk patients there by Christmas.

Boots chemists have bought 100 portable devices from US diagnostic­s firm Lumira that can give a verdict on a swab almost immediatel­y.

They will be distribute­d to stores in Britain over the next few weeks. Initial customers are expected to be travellers and companies seeking to bring staff back on to their premises. The tests could allow people to travel, to mix with friends and family and to return to offices that have been all but deserted.

Mr James said: ‘We don’t want to make a profit out of it. We are just covering our costs as there is a big upfront outlay for all the kit. My thinking is that if the volume is large we will be able to bring the price down. I’m hoping lots of people will want to do it and if they do, then we can make the price more accessible. Once it becomes more accessible in terms of cost it could be a very i mportant weapon i n the armoury against Covid.’

The fees covers third party laboratory testing, courier services, digital services, staff wages and VAT, he said.

Online business is growing rapidly for Boots. Mr James is expanding healthcare services on the web and has been revamping stores, bringing in beauty brands such as singer Rihanna’s Fenty.

Boots is part of a global pharmacy giant, Walgreens Boots Alliance, created by Italian billionair­e Stefano Pessina, 79.

Meanwhile, garden centre owners here were very disappoint­ed they were not allowed to stay open as the Level 5 restrictio­ns come at what is traditiona­lly a busy time for gardeners around the country.

It is the time of year for planting f r uit t r ees and hedging plants to start growing next spring.

It is also the time for flower bulbs – such as tulips and daffodils – to go in.

Paraic Horkan’s garden centre in Castlebar, Co. Mayo, said people need to be able to buy plants and tools to encourage them to stay active and garden at home, especially now during the Level 5 lockdown, when we are being warned not to travel beyond 5km from our homes and not to have visitors.

He said shutting down their businesses was a ‘mistake’ that will particular­ly impact negatively on the health of older people.

He explained that garden centres should be seen as an essential service at a time like t his, as he stressed t he emotional importance they provide to customers who are often older, widowed or single people living alone.

‘We have a lot of widowed people or single people who garden and they see the garden centre as a refuge space,’ he said.

‘Garden centres seen as a refuge’

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