Tuesday, May 28, 2024
ADVT 
National

Testing Backlog Linked To Shortage Of Chemicals Needed For Covid-19 Test

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 25 Mar, 2020 07:20 PM

    Regions across Canada are ramping up efforts to identify people with COVID-19 but some labs are facing a backlog due to diminishing supplies of essential chemicals needed for tests.

     

    "We all would want more tests," Canada's chief public officer Dr. Theresa Tam said Tuesday.

     

    The World Health Organization has said expansive testing is the way to curb the pandemic, but global demand has outpaced the supply of reagents — the specific chemicals needed by laboratories to complete the tests.

     

    The Center for Disease Control in the United States has also said that important reagents are "now are in short supply," a worry echoed by medical associations around the world.

     

    They are all looking for the chemical solutions at the same time and, as a result, some Canadian health authorities and labs are seeking alternative supply chains.

     

    Nearly 120,000 Canadians have been tested for the novel coronavirus — an average of 10,000 a day.

     

    Ontario Premier Doug Ford on Monday linked that province's huge testing backlog to a lack of reagents. He said health officials were doing everything they could to get more of the chemicals.

     

    Agriculture Canada has been providing reagents to the provincial lab in Alberta as it waits for an order of the testing solution to arrive, said Alberta Health spokesman Tom McMillan. The lab is also working with the University of Calgary, University of Alberta and the University of Lethbridge to find any available supply.

     

    "If the reagents run critically low, there are testing contingencies in place that will ensure we do not have to slow or halt COVID-19 testing," he said in an email.

     

    Manitoba's chief public health officer, Dr. Brent Roussin, said this week he couldn't quantify the shortage in that province but noted it is a major factor in slowing down tests.

     

    "Right now the major roadblock is the reagent and that is worldwide."

     

    Manitoba's provincial lab is working on a solution, Roussin added, which may involve manufacturing its own reagents.

     

    Health Canada is also exploring alternative COVID-19 tests and the national lab in Winnipeg is working to determine their efficacy.

     

    Certain groups are being prioritized for testing in Canada, including anyone in long-term care facilities, patients who are already hospitalized and health-care workers.

     

    "This virus has spread unbelievably quickly," said Jason Kindrachuk, a research chair in emerging viruses at the University of Manitoba.

     

    "We didn't appreciate how quickly it would be spread across the globe."

     

    He said when the novel coronavirus began to emerge in early January, some countries purchased significant amounts of important supplies. Those countries, including Australia, South Korea and Singapore, have been able to do expansive testing and have had success in mitigation and containment.

     

    The pandemic has also resulted in critical shortages of personal protective equipment, ventilators and the swabs used in testing.

     

    Kindrachuk said he saw similar supply issues when he was leading diagnostic efforts in Liberia during the Ebola outbreak in 2014.

     

    Not everyone who should have been tested was, he said. The most important shift in that fight was getting people to keep distance from one another, he said.

     

    "When we talk about physical distancing, this is not only keeping six feet away from people when you are out getting essentials. But this applies to everything that you do.

     

    "All the short-term sacrifices will help us in the long term."

     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Liquor Stores Adjust Hours In B.C. But Remain Open To Deal With Covid-19

    VANCOUVER - Liquor stores in British Columbia are adjusting their hours but will remain open as Vancouver ordered restaurants to stop offering dine-in services at midnight on Friday.    

    Liquor Stores Adjust Hours In B.C. But Remain Open To Deal With Covid-19

    Call For Covid-19 Protective Equipment Spurs College, Distiller, TV Show To Help

    VICTORIA - The novel coronavirus shut down the respiratory therapy program at Fanshawe College but that didn't stop the school from supplying much needed frontline equipment to fight COVID-19.

    Call For Covid-19 Protective Equipment Spurs College, Distiller, TV Show To Help

    'Unprecedented' Measures To Fight COVID-19 Continue As Cases Surpass 1,000

    The federal government unveiled historic new measures to combat the COVID-19 pandemic on Friday, promising a sweeping revamp of the national industrial landscape while closing the country's doors to some who might once have been welcome.

    'Unprecedented' Measures To Fight COVID-19 Continue As Cases Surpass 1,000

    Retirees, Savers Should Stick To Financial Plan Despite Market Fall, Experts Say

    Retirees, Savers Should Stick To Financial Plan Despite Market Fall, Experts Say
    VANCOUVER - Near the end of 2018, Sheldon Petrie moved $40,000 into a self-directed registered retirement savings plan and watched his nest egg grow to about $55,000 at its peak. As of Thursday, Petrie's account had sunk by some $12,000 as markets plummeted amid the spread of the novel coronavirus.    

    Retirees, Savers Should Stick To Financial Plan Despite Market Fall, Experts Say

    Alberta Announces First Covid-19 Death, Looking Into Virus At Doctors' Bonspiel

    Alberta Announces First Covid-19 Death, Looking Into Virus At Doctors' Bonspiel
    Dr. Deena Hinshaw, Alberta's chief medical officer of health, said Thursday the curlers were part of a Western Canadian doctors bonspiel last Thursday through Saturday in Edmonton.    

    Alberta Announces First Covid-19 Death, Looking Into Virus At Doctors' Bonspiel

    First Responders Adjust How They Respond To Emergencies In Face Of Pandemic

    First Responders Adjust How They Respond To Emergencies In Face Of Pandemic
    Vancouver's fire department is preparing to stop responding to the site of non-critical medical calls to preserve its ability to respond to major fires and other emergencies during the COVID-19 pandemic.

    First Responders Adjust How They Respond To Emergencies In Face Of Pandemic