Can At-Home COVID-19 Tests Make Holiday Gatherings Safer?
Yes, combined with vaccination, home test kits for COVID-19 can add a layer of safety and reassurance by providing on-the-spot results during this second year of pandemic holidays.
Can at-home COVID-19 tests make holiday gatherings safer? Photo: AP Illustration/Peter Hamlin
Can at-home COVID-19 tests make holiday gatherings safer?
Yes, combined with vaccination, home test kits for COVID-19 can add a layer of safety and reassurance by providing on-the-spot results during this second year of pandemic holidays.
“We will be using rapid tests to doublecheck everybody before we gather together,” says Dr. Emily Volk, president of the College of American Pathologists, who is planning a holiday meal with six vaccinated family members. “We’ll be doing it as they come in the door.”
Home kits are not as accurate as the PCR tests done in hospitals and at testing sites, Volk says. But they have the advantage of giving results within minutes instead of days.
Testing kits are available at drugstores without a prescription, and a box with two tests typically costs about $25. Swabs, testing solution and instructions are included.
Adults and teens can test themselves. An adult can test a child as young as 2. How-to videos on product websites can be helpful.
Most tests require swabbing about a half inch inside both nostrils, so it may tickle but doesn’t hurt. You will get a positive result if the test detects a viral protein in your sample.
Home tests will miss some infections and in rare cases mistakenly indicate an infection. One popular test misses around 15 out of 100 infections — these are called “false negatives” — and gives a false positive result in about 1 in 100 people who aren’t infected.
Test shortages were widely reported during the last COVID-19 surge, but new options have recently hit the market and major manufacturers such as Abbott Laboratories have ramped up production.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention offers other tips on ways to enjoy the holidays safely. Vaccination remains the best way to protect against the coronavirus.
-
US to reclassify marijuana as low-risk drug in historic shift
2024-05-01 -
At Columbia University, students weigh in on surrounding protests
2024-05-01 -
US lawmakers accuses oil giants of climate 'doublespeak'
2024-05-01 -
LGBTQ Iraqis fear dark days ahead after anti-gay law
2024-04-30 -
Columbia University suspends students after call to end Gaza camp unheeded
2024-04-30 -
Czechs expand rights for same-sex couples
2024-04-30 -
G7 ministers hold 'strategic' talks on climate change in Italy
2024-04-29 -
US Women's NBA star Parker retires
2024-04-29 -
PSG win French football league for 12th time as Monaco lose at Lyon
2024-04-29 -
All-female team referee Serie A match for first time
2024-04-29