Who would like 120m rapid virus tests for poorer states
Some 120 million rapid tests for Covid-19 will be produced open to poorer countries at $5 each, the World Health Organization announced Monday - if it could find the money.
The WHO said the $600 million scheme would permit low- and middle-income countries to close the dramatic gap in testing for the new coronavirus, which has now killed more than a million people since first being recorded in China in December.
The quick tests, to be distributed across 133 countries over the next six months, are not as reliable as the regular PCR nasal swab tests but are far faster, cheaper and much easier to carry out.
“We have an agreement, we've seed funding and today we need the entire amount of funds to buy these tests,” WHO director-general Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus told a virtual press conference.
The other day, the WHO issued the first emergency-use listing for an excellent, antigen-based rapid diagnostic test (RDT), with others likely to follow.
“A substantial proportion of the rapid tests - 120 million - will be made available to low- and middle-income countries,” said Tedros.
“These tests provide reliable results in approximately 15 to 30 minutes, instead of hours or days, at less price, with less sophisticated equipment.
“This will allow the expansion of testing, particularly in hard-to-reach areas that don't have lab facilities or enough trained health personnel to handle PCR tests.”
- No lab required -
The Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria, which is co-convening the WHO-led pooled global search for Covid-19 diagnostics, is putting in $50 million from its Covid-19 response pot.
Global Fund executive director Peter Sands said the RDTs were no silver bullet but were a hugely valuable complement to PCR tests.
“Although they are somewhat less accurate, they’re much faster, cheaper and don’t need a lab,” said Sands.
“This will permit low- and middle-income countries to get started to close the dramatic gap in testing.”
Sands, said that currently, high-income countries were conducting 292 tests per day per 100,000 people; upper-middle-income countries 77; lower-middle-income countries, 61; and low-income countries, 14.
He said that if the poorest countries were testing at the same rate as the richest, 120 million tests wouldn't normally last two weeks.
The tests could possibly be used where PCR tests are unavailable; quickly testing contacts where a PCR test has confirmed a case; and in places with widespread community transmission.
Sands said the first orders were moving in this week.
The tests are being made by two companies: US multinational Abbott Laboratories and South Korea-based SD BioSensor.
The 120 million tests reflect 20 percent of the firms’ manufacturing capacity. The other 80 percent remain designed for procurement.
By 1600 GMT Monday, the respiratory disease had claimed 1,002,432 victims from 33,178,275 recorded infections, according to an AFP tally collected from official sources.
“The current numbers tend an under-estimate of the true toll,” said WHO emergencies director Michael Ryan.
He said Friday that another million deaths were “highly likely” before a vaccine comes around, unless countries and people take collective action to combat the spread of the virus.