Daily Press (Sunday)

In India, at-home testing rising despite risks

- By Aniruddha Ghosal and Shonal Ganguly

NEW DELHI — On New Year’s Eve, the Indian government wrote to states encouragin­g them to promote the use of COVID19 home tests, especially for people who are experienci­ng symptoms, in a bid to avoid straining local health systems.

During last year’s deltadrive­n surge, an explosion in cases overwhelme­d hospitals and labs. But last month, as new infections fueled by the omicron variant spiked, so did the number of people testing themselves at home across India.

In the first 20 days of January, around 200,000 people shared their test results with India’s health agency — a 66-fold increase compared to all of 2021. The strategy apparently worked. Those testing positive with speedy, though less accurate tests were told to self-isolate at home, allowing hospital beds to remain available for the most vulnerable.

But experts say this figure is likely only a fraction of the actual number of tests used. Despite rules requiring people to share their results with authoritie­s, many aren’t doing so. This means the country’s already patchy testing data are even less accurate.

It’s a problem some states in India are flagging. In Maharashtr­a, state health official Dr. Pradeep Vyas appealed to all users to report their results. And since tests don’t differenti­ate between omicron and the deadlier delta variant, which also continues to spread in India, he warned there are still vulnerable people who need hospital care.

Since January, pharmacist­s in the state have begun keeping records of those buying home tests. But this isn’t the case in most Indian cities.

“If I had to guess, maybe only 20% of people using

home tests are reporting it,” said K Srinath Reddy, president of the Public Health Foundation of India, adding that every test result ideally should be reported so authoritie­s can track the virus.

“If you’re not reporting it then your sample can’t be sent for genomic analysis, and then you may miss tracking clusters and variants,” he said.

In interviews with The Associated Press, several people in New Delhi admitted they tested positive using home tests but didn’t share their results with authoritie­s.

With the highly contagious omicron variant still spreading throughout Asia, more countries are making a difficult trade-off between accuracy and speed.

In South Korea, officials said Wednesday that free coronaviru­s rapid test kits would be available at kindergart­ens, elementary schools and senior welfare centers starting next week after a wave of omicron infections.

Authoritie­s recently began moving away from a predominan­tly PCR testing strategy to rapid tests, even as some experts warned the latter do not reliably detect early omicron infections.

People can buy at-home tests from pharmacies and convenienc­e stores or take the tests for free at public health offices and testing stations, where anyone with a positive result is then given a PCR test.

Indian officials are relying on a centralize­d database where people upload their test results using a mobile app.

MyLab, the first company approved for its COVID19 home test, is producing 500,000 tests per day. Sales have jumped tenfold compared to last quarter, said Saurabh Gupta, head of strategy at MyLab. India has approved eight home tests, priced between $2 and $33.

Despite the increased use of home tests, experts say they are not as accurate as lab-run PCR tests and have a higher chance of reporting false negatives.

Parul Saxena, who lives in New Delhi, took a home test last month that turned out negative. But when she continued to have a body ache and fever, she went in for a PCR test, which confirmed what she felt all along — that she was positive for COVID-19.

India’s health ministry did not respond to questions sent via email.

Another concern is that home tests are inherently more difficult to adjust. While the accuracy of both home and lab tests are affected when a virus evolves, rapid tests may not be able to detect a new variant, said Vineeta Bal, who studies immune systems at the Indian Institute of Science Education and Research.

After last year’s delta surge and a sharp rise in omicron infections to start 2022, cases in India have now stabilized with many cities reopening restaurant­s, schools and workplaces.

On Friday, India recorded 25,920 new cases and 492 deaths — down from a high of over 300,000 cases last month. Experts have warned that India, like elsewhere, was likely missing cases even before the emergence of home testing.

But some say it is not necessary for all positive cases to be reported to authoritie­s. Officials can continue to study the virus’s spread through robust random sampling, said Dr. Jacob John, who studies viruses at the Christian Medical College in Vellore, a city in southern India.

Reddy, the public health expert, questioned the importance of case counts at this stage of the pandemic in India.

“Right now, this is not going to be the biggest priority — the important thing is to make sure that if people are getting very sick, there are enough health care facilities,” he said.

Ashley St. John, an associate professor at the DukeNUS Medical School in Singapore, agreed that other factors are more relevant.

“I think our concern with having very accurate data on positive case numbers has lessened as vaccinatio­n rates have increased,” she said. “We know that many vaccinated individual­s can test positive even without developing symptoms or severe disease.”

 ?? MAHESH KUMAR A/AP ?? A vendor displays rapid antigen test kits for COVID-19 on Wednesday in Hyderabad, India.
MAHESH KUMAR A/AP A vendor displays rapid antigen test kits for COVID-19 on Wednesday in Hyderabad, India.

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