Tuesday, March 31, 2026
ADVT 
National

Time to greenlight rapid COVID-19 tests: experts

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 23 Sep, 2020 07:24 PM
  • Time to greenlight rapid COVID-19 tests: experts

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau is promising to do more to help provinces respond to soaring demands for COVID-19 testing but there is still no indication of when the government will approve the tests that can deliver results in mere minutes.

The promise of aid for testing comes in the speech from the throne read in Ottawa today.

Canadians across the country are finding it harder to get tested for COVID-19, as demand soars and the capacity to swab people and test those swabs in labs is maxed out.

A Health Canada spokesman says the department is making it a priority to review six proposals for rapid-testing systems but that none has yet been approved.

The government says in the throne speech that as soon as the tests are approved it will do everything it can to deploy them quickly.

But two Ottawa public health experts say the rapid tests can help reduce the burden on the system even if they aren't as accurate as the government would normally like.

MORE National ARTICLES

Appeal heard in N.S. assisted death case

Appeal heard in N.S. assisted death case
A Nova Scotia Appeal Court judge has reserved her decision in a case involving a woman who is trying to stop her husband from receiving medical assistance in dying.

Appeal heard in N.S. assisted death case

N.B. parties look for all-important majority

N.B. parties look for all-important majority
When Progressive Conservative Leader Blaine Higgs called a snap election last week, he said he wanted to bring political stability to New Brunswick following two years of a minority Tory government — but a look at the province's electoral landscape reveals how difficult that is to do.

N.B. parties look for all-important majority

No charges in Korchinski-Paquet death

No charges in Korchinski-Paquet death
Regis Korchinski-Paquet fell to her death while trying to sidestep onto a neighbour's balcony, said a report released Wednesday by Ontario's police watchdog, which concludes there are no grounds to charge officers who were in her home at the time.

No charges in Korchinski-Paquet death

WATCH: Drug Overdose crisis sees 175 deaths for July, Trudeau invests $2B in schools, Canucks win against Vegas

WATCH: Drug Overdose crisis sees 175 deaths for July, Trudeau invests $2B in schools, Canucks win against Vegas
Drug Overdose crisis for BC Up by 136% - 175 deaths in July 2020, hospitalizations on the rise in BC due to COVID-19, Vancouver Canucks showed they could do better as they win Tuesday night's game against the Golden Vegas Knights.

WATCH: Drug Overdose crisis sees 175 deaths for July, Trudeau invests $2B in schools, Canucks win against Vegas

Indigenous teen remembered as driven and hilarious

Indigenous teen remembered as driven and hilarious
Roderica Ribbonleg had big plans to make her family proud and her first milestone was her high school graduation.

Indigenous teen remembered as driven and hilarious

Disability aid to cost $792 million, says PBO

Disability aid to cost $792 million, says PBO
The parliamentary budget office says a one-time payment to people with disabilities this fall will cost the federal treasury $792 million.

Disability aid to cost $792 million, says PBO