We need it for a number of things,said Sally Otto, a UBC evolutionary biologist and member of B.C.’s COVID-19 Modelling Team.
In order to predict when we’re going to be at the peak, when we’re going to be at the downside of this Omicron wave, we need to know how many people are infected. If we don’t have a good sense of that, it’s really hard to know, are we still at the beginning of this wave or are we at the end of this wave?
The tracking of positive results from rapid tests is extremely limited, with most jurisdictions forgoing any kind of reporting system, and it’s getting more difficult for people to access other forms of testing in several parts of Canada.
On Thursday, for example, Ontario changed its testing guidelines to say people who receive positive results on rapid antigen tests no longer need to get PCR tests (new window) for confirmation. And as of Friday, the province is also limiting PCR testing to high-risk people who are symptomatic, vulnerable populations and workers in high-risk settings.
A patchwork of approaches to documenting rapid test results are in place in jurisdictions throughout Canada to document rapid test results, such as:
- Vancouver Coastal Health is asking people who test positive at home to fill out an online form .
- Alberta advises people to notify their family doctors.
- Peterborough Public Health in Ontario encourages people to report results using a QR code .
A piecemeal effort is not going to be as good in terms of the ability to have a good sense of actually how many people are infected right now, what’s the predicted burden that’s going to lead to with hospitalization and when will we be through this,
Otto said.
The best data we’ve had about the COVID pandemic has been from the United Kingdom and that’s been because of their strong data analytic framework. They have data on cases linked to hospitalization and vaccination and that’s world class,
Otto said.
Next steps
Jarvis Schmid of Calgary tested positive for COVID-19 on a rapid test on Boxing Day.
After he processed the news, Schmid next wondered what he needed to do with his result.
I remember someone saying something about it’s good to have these records on hand. What if you have long term symptoms or it helps with diagnoses?
said the 38-year-old, who has been isolating from his family.
There is no system to track rapid test results in Alberta so Schmid instead uploaded a photo of his rapid test along with the date he took the test into his electronic medical records.
I understand they probably couldn’t get something in place right away. I hope they end up putting something in place that you can easily log this. But right now it’s a bit of a scramble mode,
he said.
However, not everyone agrees a portal similar to what Schmid suggests would be helpful.
Dr. Stephanie Smith, an infectious diseases specialist at the University of Alberta, said that type of tracking would require people to be proactive about inputting their results.
I think the time and effort and money it takes may not actually result in a huge amount of benefit in terms of giving us more information than what we have from the subset of people that are still getting PCR tested,
Smith said.
Down the line
Alberta family physician Dr. David Keegan said something is better than nothing when it comes to tracking rapid test results.
He’s primarily concerned with the bureaucratic consequences for patients who only have a positive rapid test rather than PCR confirmation.
Will disability, insurance companies accept those when later on, people are looking at long-term disability for benefits and for access to services? Will those self-reported results be accepted? We don’t know,
Keegan said.
Let’s hope they are. It would just be ideal if governments had figured out a way to gather such data, rapid test results objectively.
Julia Wong · CBC News