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As doctors urge more COVID-19 testing in schools, millions of rapid tests sit unused

Doctors applaud the start of rapid test use in long-term care homes but say the tests should also be used as part of the safe reopening of schools in high community transmission areas.

Ontario has distributed fewer than one-quarter of the 4.6M rapid tests it has received

Schools in Toronto opened their doors to students in September after being shut down for months due to COVID-19. During the harsh second wave of the virus, Ontario schools were closed again, and those in the hardest-hit regions are not expected to reopen until at least Feb. 10. (Evan Mitsui/CBC)

Improved access and quicker turnaround times for COVID-19 testing areessential if schools in Ontario's hardest-hit regions are to open again safely, experts say.

Yet as the province delays in-class learning again for students in theGreater Toronto and Hamilton regions, Windsor-Essex and Ottawa, the bulk of 4.6million rapid COVID-19 tests sent to Ontario by the Public Health Agency of Canada sit unused. It's still unclear whether or how they mightbe used as part of the provincial safe school reopening strategy.

In an interview with CBC News on Friday evening, Ontario Education Minister Stephen Lecce said that as other southern Ontario schools open onMonday, the province isready to provide whatever testing capacity isneeded. But he saidit would be up to local public health units to make the call.

"Both tests and people can be deployed when the public health unit deems it right," Lecce said. "We are not involved as a ministry or politicians in deploying it. We leave that up to the medical officers locally."

Lecce also said that rapid tests could be "layered into" a school testing program, but that decision would be up to the province's chief medical officer of health, Dr. David Williams.

When asked at a news conference on Thursday about the potential use of Ontario's supply of rapid tests in schools, Ontario's associate chief medical officer of health, Dr. Barbara Yaffe,said she and Williamswere working with the Ministry of Education and "other partners ... to figure out what the best way to do this is."

Yaffe made reference to a school testing pilot project in November and December on asymptomatic students, staff and families in high-risk areas of Toronto, Ottawa and York and Peel regions.

Dr. Barbara Yaffe, Ontario's associate chief medical officer of health, left, with Dr. David Williams, chief medical officer of health, shown last year, says they're working with the Ministry of Education and 'other partners' to find a way to use the province's rapid tests in schools. (Pierre-Olivier Bernatchez/CBC)

That voluntary asymptomatictesting identifiedCOVID-19 cases that may otherwise have been missed, including an outbreak ofmore than 20 cases at a Toronto school.

Thepilot used the traditional nasopharyngealPCRtest to diagnose COVID-19, in which a longswab is used tocollect the sample from the back of the nose and throat and is thenanalyzed in a lab.

At the news conference, Yaffesaid there were questions about the accuracy of rapid tests versus that "gold standard," but she noted thatthey were "looking at" the possibility of using them.

'Test that is done is the best test'

But experts say thattesting rates are too low and and wait times for results are too longas Ontario struggles with high case numbers an indication thatit'stime to make greateruse ofHealth Canada-approved rapid PCRtestsand rapid antigen tests,which can beanalyzed on the spot and provide results within minutes.

"Right now we should be using all of the tools we have," said Dr. Irfan Dhalla,co-chair of Canada's COVID-19 Testing and Screening Expert Advisory Panel.

"While a rapid antigen test is not as accurate as the laboratory-based PCR test, a rapid antigen test is certainly better than no test at all," said Dhalla, who is also a generalinternal medicine specialistandvice-president at Unity Health Toronto.

WATCH| Dr. Irfan Dhalla on importance of rapid COVID-19 tests in safe school reopening:

Doctor says rapid COVID tests can help in safely reopening schools

4 years ago
Duration 0:41
Dr. Irfan Dhalla, co-chair of Canada's COVID-19 Testing and Screening Expert Advisory Panel, says rapid tests could be especially useful for schools located in areas where there is high community transmission.

That's especially true in areas where community spread is high, he said, because getting as many people as possible tested quickly and therefore isolating positive cases fasteris key to preventing them from spreading the virus to others.

The fact that rapid tests can beless accurate than the lab-analyzed counterpart fosteredskepticism about their usefulness earlier in the pandemic, but Dhalla said that thinking has shifted.

"What theylose in accuracy can be gained back through the rapid turnaround time and through frequency" that isn't possible in lab-based tests, he said.

That meansrapid antigen tests could be helpful in preventing COVID-19 outbreaks in schools,Dhalla said, because students, teachersand staff could be tested repeatedly and regularly throughout the school year.Those who test positive wouldget a PCRlab test to confirm the diagnosisbut would already be isolated while awaiting confirmation.

"If we adopt the view and I think most of us do have this view that schools should basically be one of the last communal settings to close and one of the first communal settings to reopen, then it makes sense that when community transmission is still an issue and we are just reopening schools, that we should try to reopen schools ... in such a manner that we can detect these outbreaks either, you know, before they occur [and] prevent the outbreakaltogether, or detect them when they are really, really small," he said.

"And so the rapid antigen tests do have a role to play."

A man sitting down.
Dr. Zain Chagla, an infectious disease specialist and an associate professor at McMaster University in Hamilton, says using rapid COVID-19 tests makes sense in settings such as long-term care homes and schools. (Craig Chivers/CBC)

Dr. Zain Chagla, an infectious disease specialist at McMaster University in Hamilton, said rapid testing in schools can also help public health experts understand where COVID-19 is circulating in the broader community. That's especially true, he said,in areas where there's high community transmission but a low number of people getting the traditional tests either due to difficulty in accessing testing centres or reluctance to go to them because they feel stigmatized.

"At the end of the day, the objective is to get more positive people identified and isolated to break chains of transmission," Chaglasaid. "The test that is done is the best test. Not the one that we think is the best on paper. It's the one that actually gets done."

Rapid testsin long-term care homes, workplaces

As of Monday, the Public Health Agency of Canada haddistributed about 15million rapid COVID tests across the country most goingdirectly to the provinces and territories, a spokesperson told CBC News in an email.

Ontario has received4,625,084 of those tests. According to updated numbers provided by the province's Ministry of Health to CBC News on Monday,it haddeployed about onemillionof those tests.

More than 159,000 rapid PCR tests have gone to rural and remote communities, including First Nations, the ministry said, and about 850,000 rapid antigen tests have been distributed to long-term care homes and workplaces.

Ontario's Ministry of Health says it has dispatched thousands of rapid antigen tests to long-term care homes in order to increase testing for staff and visitors. (Evan Mitsui/CBC)

According to the ministry, more than 150 long-term care homes are using themto test staff and visitors more frequently to better protect long-term care residentssomething both Dhalla and Chagla agree is a critical use for rapidtests.

The Health Ministry also saidit has distributed rapid tests to more than 150workplaces including Air Canada, Magna and Ontario Power Generation.

In an email, the ministry told CBC News that itwould also be distributing more rapid tests in apilot program "for participating employers in the private, public and non-profit sectors, prioritizing access for health-care settings, essential front-line settingsand congregate settings."

Through that program, the provincial government aims to "learn about the value of antigen screening for asymptomatic workers in a range of workplace settings, and [the program] will inform future decisions about safely and fully reopening the economy."

A couple of provinces are using some of their federally distributed rapid COVIDtests forstudents or teachers, but in a limited way.

However, Quebec is launching a studyin two Montreal high schoolsto determine how effective rapid tests are at identifying COVID-19 cases in school settings.

Manitoba has started a "fast pass" system for teachers and staff infive school divisions, which allows them to get a rapid test at a centralized location.

Nova Scotia is not doing rapidCOVID-19 testing in elementary or secondaryschools, but the province has trained volunteers to help at a pop-up rapid testing clinic that travels the province and frequently sets up atDalhousie University, providing easy access for students there.

Nova Scotia is using many of its rapid COVID tests in a mobile testing program, shown here at Halifax's Dalhousie University in November. (Robert Short/CBC)

With files from CBC Manitoba and CBC Montreal

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