Waterloo workplace trial swaps COVID-19 swabs for saline spit test - Action News
Home WebMail Thursday, November 14, 2024, 01:48 AM | Calgary | 6.7°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Kitchener-Waterloo

Waterloo workplace trial swaps COVID-19 swabs for saline spit test

A grassroots group of local healthcare workers and thinkers are using a spit and saline rinse to test for COVID-19 and want to test the screening with as many interested workplaces as possible around Waterloo region.

Grassroots group piloting swish testing at workplaces around Waterloo region

A grassroots group of local healthcare workers and thinkers are using spit and saline rinse to test for COVID-19 and want to pilot the tests with as many interested workplaces as possible around Waterloo region. (Yves Herman/Reuters)

Jeff Araminiseesa future where everyone in an office or factory gets tested for COVID-19 once or twice a week.

He and a group of local grassroots healthcare workers and thinkershave spent the past fewmonths brainstorming and studying"out-of-the-box" testing alternativesto try and make it happen. They even got federal research money.

"The current strategy of state controlled testing is simply not working,"saidAramini, an epidemiologist and business advisor at University of Waterloo's Velocity startup incubator. "It's been proven over and over again that regular screening is a thing to do and for some reason, Canada's been slow at sort of figuring that out."

They've landed on using saline rinse and spit, known as a swish test. Instead of sticking a swab up your nose and tickling around, yousipa bit of sterile salt water (saline), gargle it and provide a spit sample which is thentested for COVID-19.

The method was developed in British Columbia. The group thinks it is an easier way to test, which helps cover more people.Unlike the swab test used atCOVID assessment centres, you don't need a doctor or nurse to collect the sample.

Araminiand his grouprunning a pilot over the next few months looking for workplaces inWaterloo region interested in paying to frequentlytesttheir employees.They've secured a research lab testing facility and promise results with a one day turnaround. Each test would be between $40 to $60.

The swish and gargle method is being used to test school-aged children in British Columbia, Nova Scotia and New Brunswick. (BCCDC file photo)

It'sbilledas "preventative screening", hoping tocatch asymptomatic workers unknowingly shedding and spreading the virus and possiblyprevent those mass workplace outbreaks, recently seen at a MississaugaCanada Post facilityand Cargill's Guelph meat processing plant.

"The entire goal behind regular screening is to identify those people and get them to isolate," said Aramini. "Anything that can be done to increase the level of testing in Canada needs to happen."

Less invasive alternative 'extremely attractive'

Dr. Doug Friars, a family doctor andlead physician at Guelph's COVID assessment centre, is also part of the group. He's been finding people getting tested are reluctant to get the swab up their nose, particularly children.

In B.C., Nova Scotia and New Brunswick, this swish and gargletesting is being used as an alternativefor school-aged kids.

Friarsunderstandsthe discomfort. He said he gets testedevery few days sohe can go visit his mom, who is in a facility.

"You get [the swab]down once, but try getting it a second time and it's extremely traumatizing," he said. "An alternative that's less invasive is extremely attractive."

Dr. Doug Friars admits Canada's been slow to implement other types of COVID testing and screening. He thinks screening workplaces using the swish method helps tap into a whole new set of testing not being done right now. (Submitted by Doug Friars)

Friars has been helping run local studies over the past few months, looking atthe accuracyofswish method. He said it'scomparable to the swab. CBCreached out to Ontario's Ministry of Health about the method and its accuracy but has yet to hear back.

But Friarscautions, it's ascreening technique and not a diagnostic test, like you would get at an assessment centre. In the pilot, those with positive spit tests are considered to be"presumed positives." They would be told to isolate and referred to an assessment centre to get further tested.

The group'spilot is starting with workplaces,but Friar's big idea is to make swish more widely available.

"We're hoping this can be a very powerful tool to help us contain COVID."