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Medicine

Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation Promises Home-Testing Kits for Coronavirus (seattletimes.com) 66

An anonymous reader quotes the Seattle Times: Testing for the novel coronavirus in the Seattle area will get a huge boost in the coming weeks as a project funded by Bill Gates and his foundation begins offering home-testing kits that will allow people who fear they may be infected to swab their noses and send the samples back for analysis. Results, which should be available in one to two days, will be shared with local health officials who will notify those who test positive.

Via online forms, infected people can answer questions about their movements and contacts, making it easier for health officials to locate others who may need to be tested or quarantined, as well as to track the virus' spread and identify possible hot spots.

Initially, the lab will be able to conduct about 400 tests a day, eventually expanding to thousands of tests a day, said Scott Dowell, leader of coronavirus response at the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. The project is ramping up as quickly as possible, but it's not clear exactly when it will launch, he added. Among other things, software needs to be upgraded to handle the expected crush of requests, and a detailed questionnaire finalized for people who request tests. "Although there's a lot to be worked out, this has enormous potential to turn the tide of the epidemic," Dowell said.

The article points out that the kits "will reduce the need for sick people to visit a doctor's office or clinic, lowering the chance of exposing others."

The foundation has already committed up to $100 million to the global response to COVID-19, including up to $20 million to accelerate international efforts to control the spread, up to $20 million to help partners in sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia strengthen their response, and up to $60 million to kick-start the development of vaccines and treatments.
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Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation Promises Home-Testing Kits for Coronavirus

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  • by SmaryJerry ( 2759091 ) on Sunday March 08, 2020 @02:54PM (#59808896)
    Now sick people are all going to be handling mail, which I assume gets mixed in with other mail.. or am I missing something?
    • Now sick people are all going to be handling mail, which I assume gets mixed in with other mail.. or am I missing something?

      From the 2 hour delivery time for the kits, I'm guessing UberCorona will be doing the delivery and pickups.

    • Oh noes. It's much better sick people go out in public areas and sit around infecting everyone else in the queue at their local GP's office.

  • People really do not like to go to doctors offices, so many will not - especially since in a fair number of people, the actual Covid symptoms could be mild but they would still be highly contagious. So best to make it as easy to know as possible if you should really avoid others.

    But most everyone would be happy to take a test at home, and then they could figure out from there what made the most sense to do if they had it...

  • Wouldn't it be better to just have doctors make house visits for collections? That way only one trained professional is exposed, who knows how to stay safe.
    • Wouldn't it be better to just have doctors make house visits for collections?

      No. You don't need four years of college, four more years of medical school, and years of residency training, to stick a cotton swab up someone's nose.

      • by qubezz ( 520511 )
        Nor do you need a special test to take your temperature and analyze vectors you might have been in contact with.
    • Wouldn't it be better to just have doctors make house visits for collections? That way only one trained professional is exposed, who knows how to stay safe.

      Good idea. Then they could spread the virus to the entire population.

    • by AHuxley ( 892839 )
      Mask up and suit up every home visit? Few nations have that amount of free staff, masks and suits per doctor anymore.
  • by Anonymous Coward

    What happens to my DNA? What else do they screen for besides Coronavirus? Is the data retained by B&MG foundation and/or affiliates after being provided to a local health care provider? I can't help but look for ulterior motives.

    • What happens to my DNA? What else do they screen for besides Coronavirus? Is the data retained by B&MG foundation and/or affiliates after being provided to a local health care provider? I can't help but look for ulterior motives.

      From the article, there is some more data they want to collect:

      "Via online forms, infected people can answer questions about their movements and contacts, making it easier for health officials to locate others who may need to be tested or quarantined, as well as to track the virus’ spread and identify possible hot spots."

    • by leonbev ( 111395 )

      Soo... you think that the B&MG Foundation is going to sequence their DNA, look for possible genetic markers for other illnesses, and then sell that data to Google in Facebook (in some sort pseudo-anonomous data aggregate, naturally, because of HIPPA rules) so they can target those folks with medication ads?

      That's pretty evil. I'm amazed that someone else didn't already think of it.

    • For one lucky donor, they will have the honor of bearing a close resemblance to the new soldiers of the Republic, er, Empire.

  • by AndyKron ( 937105 ) on Sunday March 08, 2020 @03:54PM (#59809000)
    I can't read the article because I refuse to be tracked.
  • Beijing should subsidize the development of the home-testing kits because Chinese culture is the catalyst for spreading the coronavirus.

    In an opinion piece [nytimes.com] published by the New York Times, an economics professor at Yamanashi Gakuin University (in Japan) explains how behavior which is endemic in Chinese culture facilitated the new coronavirus' spreading beyond the borders of China. He wrote, "As far as the current outbreak goes, two cultural factors help explain how the natural occurrence of a single virus

    • There is a typo in the title of the comment. The title should be changed from "Chinese Culture is the Catalyst fo the Coronavirus".to "Chinese Culture is the Catalyst for the Coronavirus".
    • Chinese do eat a lot of things that seem strange to Westerners, but eating bats is pretty rare even in China.

      As for the culture of punishing the messenger, yes that does seem to have played a role in a delayed response early-on. At the same time, though, their communist government was able to mount an effort at spreading the virus that would be simply impossible in pretty much any other nation on earth.

      Whether their response was appropriate will probably be debated for eons (I'm not particularly a fan-- loo

      • there are positives and negatives about Chinese culture in the context of this disease.

        I'll give you that when the CCP decided to act, they were decisive and made some bold moves. But the root problem here is the CCP's enthusiastic promotion [economist.com] of traditional Chinese medicine in the first place. They love to promote ancient Chinese culture and then take credit for it.

    • Agree. if China had been eating hamberders and KFC like normal people this would never have happened. Of course they would have lost way more due to diabetes, but that's a perfectly respectable health problem.
  • So a free virus scanner. Now for a catchy name, like people defender.

  • Just send my personal information and DNA to Bill Gates, and if they decide I have the virus, I can expect to be contacted by local officials. A plan with no drawbacks, besides the whole fucking thing.

  • OK here is the thing. Most people who get covid-19 will experience nothing worse than a common cold. However, because we have no immunity to this virus, someone with covid-19 who doesn't self-isolate will infect a lot of other people, of which, on average around 15% will need hospitalization. Apart from the actual work of tracking and testing which appears to have worked in Japan, to make difference you would need to test everyone with a common cold. At any particular time, around 5% of the population will

  • It'll get tons of free advertising. Guaranteed money-maker.
  • You don't want people to self diagnose and nobody else knowing about their infection if you want any chance of smothering this outbreak.

"An idealist is one who, on noticing that a rose smells better than a cabbage, concludes that it will also make better soup." - H.L. Mencken

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