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 at-home covid test


Should Parents Stock Up on At-Home COVID Tests?

Slate

He's 11-years-old and, until he can receive his shots, Gronvall's been using at-home COVID-19 test kits in order to determine if his sniffles are more than allergies or a slight cold. The test swabs are longer than a Q-tip, but easier on the nasal cavity than a flu diagnostic or the original "brain swab" used to test for COVID since early in the pandemic. "There's often a lot of stuff coming out of their nose," Gronvall said of her kids, with a slight chuckle, when we talked recently. As an associate professor at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Gronvall knows the importance of testing. "We can't all rely on everybody being extra scrupulous and paying attention to all of the COVID restrictions," she said.


We reviewed three at-home covid tests. The results were mixed.

MIT Technology Review

Over-the-counter home tests for covid-19 are finally here. MIT Technology Review obtained kits sold by three companies and tried them out. After buying tests from CVS and online, I tested myself several times and ended up learning an important lesson: while some people worry that home tests could miss covid cases, the bigger problem may be just the opposite. These tests have "false positive" rates of around 2%, which means that if you keep using them, you'll eventually test positive, even though you don't have covid-19. I tested negative several times, but the fourth time the result came up "POSITIVE FOR COVID-19."