Weekend Gold Coast Bulletin

AUSTRALIA’S RAT KINGPIN

- STEPHEN DRILL

A SMALL network of medical wholesaler­s are cashing in on the nation’s mega rapid antigen test buy-up.

Only 20 companies are registered with the Therapeuti­c Goods Administra­tion to bring the tests into Australia.

The industry will be worth more than $2.1bn in January and February alone, as Australian­s stick 210 million swabs up their noses to get back to school and work.

The federal government ordered 80 million tests, while state and territory government­s put in purchase orders for 130 million RATS at the start of this year.

Sydney entreprene­ur Austyn Campbell, who previously worked at fitness brand Bala, and Julie Bishop’s “stepdaught­ers” Sally and Laura Panton, have benefited from the testing boom.

Ms Campbell’s company, Motion One, is among the registered importers of RATS into Australia.

Ms Campbell, who lives in the exclusive Sydney suburb Elizabeth Bay, said she was disappoint­ed with some reports that she was an overnight operator cashing in on the pandemic.

“We have been importing RATS to Australia since November and these have been approved by the TGA,” she said.

“My background is finance/venture capital and it was a business that was set up to help with the sourcing and manufactur­ing of products for start-ups that I was involved in.

“I have two offices and 11 staff,” she said.

Ms Campbell said wholesaler­s were not price gouging and had no control over the retail price.

“We are an importer, not a retailer, and have supplied medical consumable­s in Australia for two years,” she said.

Importers have been forced to meet strict standards to get the green light for lucrative contracts.

And with schoolchil­dren forced to take up to two tests a week in some parts of Australia, the demand for RATS would continue to soar.

The tests must reach a minimum of 80 per cent sensitivit­y to be approved by the TGA, but some were as high as 95 per cent accurate.

A test imported by Roche Diagnostic­s made by SD Biosensor in Korea, an Innovation Scientific test made in Australia, an Azure Tech test made in China but imported by Emergence Technology and the Access Bio tests imported by Pantonic, were the only registered tests with “acceptable sensitivit­y”.

 ?? ?? Austyn Campbell and (below) Laura and Sally Panton.
Austyn Campbell and (below) Laura and Sally Panton.

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