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Free Rapid COVID Tests Are Coming Back. How Should We Use Them?
Medpage Today ^ | September 28, 2023 | Jeremy Faust, MD

Posted on 09/29/2023 5:11:21 PM PDT by nickcarraway

— The fact is, we have not maximized their actual best use

I was an early believeropens in a new tab or window in the usefulness of at-home rapid COVID tests. Used correctly, they can decrease the spread of COVID-19. The Biden administration announcedopens in a new tab or window last week that free tests will once again be available on the Covid.govopens in a new tab or window website.

Wait, What Do Rapid Antigen Tests Tell Us Again?

A positive rapid antigen COVID test means you have COVID, and you're likely to be contagious at the time of the test.

A negative test means different things at different times:

You have COVID, but it's too soon for a rapid test to detect: It could be early, and you're on the brink of having enough virus to turn positive on a rapid test. You have COVID, but it's too late for a rapid test to detect (i.e., you actually have had COVID for a week or two): You are likely no longer contagious. If you had taken tests a few days or a week prior, it would've been positive. You don't have COVID: If you test negative on a rapid test every day for 6-7 days after a high-risk exposure (and never developed symptoms), it's safe to assume you never got the virus (which is something a lab-based PCR test would definitively prove). Everything would be perfect if people could remember the following about rapid antigen tests: Negative? You might have COVID but you're not contagious now. Test again at least a couple more times over the coming days. Positive? You're infected and contagious.

What Should We Be Doing With the Information Rapid COVID Tests Provide?

How to act on the information at-home rapid COVID tests provide remains a source of great confusion. The CDC has an online toolopens in a new tab or window that tells people what to do with their test results, depending on the circumstances. It's basically a good resource, because it spits out answers based on the specific information you enter. You enter the date of a high-risk exposure or the first positive COVID test, and it tells you how long to stay home and how long to wear a mask. While I don't agree with every answer it provides, it's pretty good; if everyone who had a high-risk exposure or test-confirmed COVID followed the tool's advice, COVID would spread a lot less.

image A screenshot of the CDC COVID-19 isolation guidance page, with the link to the isolation timing tool circled in red.

Problem #1 With Rapid Tests in Today's World

The problem with rapid tests is they often don't mean what people think. As above, when done too soon after exposure, people think a negative test means they don't have COVID. On the other hand, some people think that rapid tests miss cases altogether. That's really only true if a test is done once (too early) and not repeated later. If you have COVID and you take rapid tests correctly, it'll turn positive at some point. Meanwhile, some people don't think a positive test means anything for those without symptoms. Not true; some asymptomatic people have high viral loadsopens in a new tab or window. Remember: people with high viral loads are at peak contagiousness and they reliably test positive on rapids. Symptoms may correlate to this, but not always.

In one datasetopens in a new tab or window I recently analyzed, people with mild symptoms had lower average viral levels than those with moderate or severe symptoms. But, people with resolved symptoms had higher average viral loads than those with mild symptoms. One patient whose symptoms resolved after 3 days had an extremely high viral load on day 7 (they'd obviously been infected 0-3 days before symptom onset). The CDC would have that highly contagious person running around town. I wouldn't have.

All this says is that binary yes/no answers on rapid antigen tests are safe to act on if you simply believe the result at the moment it was taken; don't attempt to factor in symptoms or other factors (like vaccine status, or Paxlovid use). Some people might have very different combinations of symptoms and viral levels depending on their own immune status -- a combination of their own immune system and prior exposures to the virus or vaccines.

Problem #2 With Rapid Tests in Today's World

There's actually another problem with rapid tests. Like PCR tests done in labs, rapids actually stay positive for longer than they should in many cases. PCR tests can stay positive for many weeksopens in a new tab or window, well after the illness has genuinely resolved and the contagious window has closed. That's why you don't need to test negative on a PCR before ending isolation; we know it'll be positive for far longer than a patient is contagious or ill. Meanwhile, rapid antigen tests often stay positive for 5-14 days. But after 5-7 days, how contagious you are often drops by a huge amount -- possibly 10-1000 fold! So, a person with a positive rapid on day 12 is likely much less contagious than they were on day 3-7.

In the early days of rapid tests, many people were willing and able to isolate for 5-14 days -- until the rapids turned negative -- because they did not want to spread COVID. Nowadays, even many well-meaning people don't do that. (The CDC does not require it -- mainly because it is practicing "harm reduction.")

So what's an ethical person to do? That is -- you may have COVID but you don't really want to isolate for 14 days (which is how long many people test positive on rapids). Meanwhile, you don't want to be a sociopath, pretend nothing is wrong, go out and about after a couple of days and risk spreading COVID to high-risk people.

Currently, the CDC's guidanceopens in a new tab or window is the closest thing we have to threading that needle. Unfortunately, the guidance has two weaknesses. First, it takes symptoms into account, which it shouldn't (on average, the guidance is right, but there are too many outliers). Second, its timeline is too simplistic. One person might have peak viral levels on day 3 after first testing positive, and another on day 7, regardless of symptoms. The CDC's guidance allows some very viral people to go out. While they recommend masking at this point, that's not enough during peak shedding (at other times, it probably is, with the right mask). Theoretically, we can do better than this...but only theoretically, so far.

Moving Beyond Yes/No Rapid Tests

There's a trove of data on rapid antigen tests that you've likely never heard about. Turns out that these tests can do more than provide a yes/no answer on contagiousness. The brightnessopens in a new tab or window of the test line and how fast it appears likely correlate to how much virus you have and thus how contagious you are. There are probably a couple of days in which most of your viral particles are exhaled. We should be detecting those times and acting on them.

In the future, there may be rapid tests approved to give more than yes/no answers. Imagine a test that has two yes options. One says you're positive. The other indicates whether your virus levels are extremely high. Because extremely high viral levels tend to only last 0-3 days, people could isolate only then, and safely wear an N95 mask (and avoid crowded spaces) for the next week. Isolating for the correct 2-3 days (when both "yes" lines were positive) instead of 5-14 days would decrease inconvenience substantially (and increase adherence), and -- based on what we've learned about viral dynamics -- still potentially decrease spread massively, perhaps by 90% or more, depending on the circumstances. Add good masking at the tail end, and air ventilation to public spaces, and we could decrease spread further.

The key is giving people information they are willing and able to act on. That's the future we need to create. Currently, rapid COVID tests exist in an anti-Goldilocks situation; people who don't want to be inconvenienced won't take them at all, while the highly conscientious will but are then "punished" for being good citizens, consigned to longer isolation periods than necessary to achieve our goals.

The technology for this approach exists and is not costlier than current rapid tests. It's just a matter of getting the FDA and the public to respond to the situation on the ground; that is, we should adjust what we are testing for and what to do about it. It's 2023, not 2022, not 2020. Also, it's not 2019 either.

Jeremy Faust, MD,opens in a new tab or window is editor-in-chief of MedPage Today, and an emergency medicine physician at Brigham and Women's Hospital in Boston. He is author of the Substack column Inside Medicineopens in a new tab or window, where this postopens in a new tab or window originally appeared.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Health/Medicine
KEYWORDS:
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1 posted on 09/29/2023 5:11:21 PM PDT by nickcarraway
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To: nickcarraway

Into the trash can.


2 posted on 09/29/2023 5:12:43 PM PDT by Deaf Smith (When a Texan takes his chances, chances will be taken that's for sure.)
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To: nickcarraway

Throw the tests away.
You don’t anxiously test for the seasonal flu, you don’t need to test for Covid.

I wish I saved the YOUTUBE link of people showing how to get a day off from work by exposing the rapid Covid test to Orange Crush to get a positive test result (blue stripe).


3 posted on 09/29/2023 5:13:54 PM PDT by ransomnote (IN GOD WE TRUST)
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To: ransomnote

Can I get the same results with Fanta?


4 posted on 09/29/2023 5:15:12 PM PDT by Antihero101607
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To: nickcarraway

Too bad you can’t wipe with them.


5 posted on 09/29/2023 5:15:24 PM PDT by eieio1
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To: nickcarraway
Free Rapid COVID Tests Are Coming Back. How Should We Use Them?

Like Ron Swanson used vegan bacon.

6 posted on 09/29/2023 5:16:10 PM PDT by Harmless Teddy Bear (Keep America Beautiful by keeping Canadian Trash Out. Deport Jennifer Granholm!)
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To: nickcarraway
How Should We Use Them?

Don't.

7 posted on 09/29/2023 5:17:47 PM PDT by Jess Kitting
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To: nickcarraway

Kindling?

Shims?


8 posted on 09/29/2023 5:19:26 PM PDT by DuncanWaring (The Lord uses the good ones; the bad ones use the Lord.)
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To: eieio1

The Chinese have a test like that.


9 posted on 09/29/2023 5:19:56 PM PDT by SIDENET
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To: nickcarraway

10 posted on 09/29/2023 5:22:32 PM PDT by algore
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To: nickcarraway

The swabs are to small to wipe my ass. So nothing.


11 posted on 09/29/2023 5:23:33 PM PDT by TonyinLA (I don't have sufficient information to formulate a reasoned opinion said no lefty ever.)
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To: nickcarraway

As door stops.


12 posted on 09/29/2023 5:23:57 PM PDT by jimfree (My 20 y/o granddaughter continues to have more quality exec experience than Joe Biden.)
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To: nickcarraway

They aren’t free. Taxpayers are forced to pay for them.


13 posted on 09/29/2023 5:24:09 PM PDT by ViLaLuz (2 Chronicles 7:14)
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To: nickcarraway

These tests made in China? If so, who is buying them?


14 posted on 09/29/2023 5:26:11 PM PDT by goodnesswins ( We pretend to vote and they pretend to count the votes.)
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To: nickcarraway

How Should We Use Them?

To replace divots.


15 posted on 09/29/2023 5:26:49 PM PDT by redrhino47 (#Tuesday Weld)
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To: nickcarraway
"Free Rapid COVID Tests Are Coming Back. How Should We Use Them?

Give them to your worse enemies.
16 posted on 09/29/2023 5:28:32 PM PDT by clearcarbon (Fraudulent elections have consequences.)
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To: Harmless Teddy Bear

And his secretary April…


17 posted on 09/29/2023 5:32:58 PM PDT by EEGator
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To: nickcarraway
Seems like someone with ties to the Bidem Administration is using this as an opportunity to get some dollars from taxpayers.

We ended the state of emergency due to covid so there should be a congressional hearing on this matter.

18 posted on 09/29/2023 5:33:16 PM PDT by MinorityRepublican
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To: nickcarraway

When testing was the thing, if you had Covid symptoms, you were expected to isolate for a number of days, 10 IIRC, from when you first started showing symptoms if you didn’t test.

However, if you took the test part way through the illness, and it was positive, then you were also expected to isolate for 10 days from the last positive Covid test, which could potentially require you to isolate for up to three weeks.

So why would I want to risk testing near the end of the course of the illness in the event it showed positive and I had to start the 10 day isolation all over again?


19 posted on 09/29/2023 5:38:27 PM PDT by metmom (He who testifies to these things says, “Surely I am coming soon.” Amen. Come, Lord Jesus.)
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To: nickcarraway

I use mine by stabilizing an uneven table.


20 posted on 09/29/2023 5:39:42 PM PDT by Jonty30 (If liberals were truth tellers, they'd call themselves literals. )
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