dan kelly, ceo of the canadian federation of independent business, also welcomed the announcement but was frustrated at how long it took to happen.
“this is long, long, long overdue,” kelly said. “ontario, to its credit, did move on removing some of the regulatory hurdles earlier than a lot of provinces. but it’s outrageous to me that governments allowed a whole year before they actually got their act together and allowed for rapid testing to be used as a tool to try to keep asymptomatic spread out of canadian workplaces.”
the program is based in part on
a successful project run in waterloo region called staysafe
that launched in mid-april. in its first two weeks, staysafe gave out 120,000 rapid tests to more than 1,500 businesses.
prime minister justin trudeau gave credit to the staysafe project in announcing the rapid testing expansion friday. “cases have been found in asymptomatic people who had no idea they were positive, but because of the test result, were then able to isolate to prevent transmission,” trudeau said. “more screening and testing means safer workplaces and less community transmission that will help us reopen our economy faster.”
advocates of rapid testing have long argued that too much attention is paid to the lower sensitivity of the tests compared to lab-based pcr testing. the key to rapid testing is frequency. the tests, which use a shallow nasal swab, can be done over and over again — ideally every day, but at least twice a week in the meantime — to find cases in asymptomatic people who would otherwise not qualify for a lab test, and might then spend days passing the virus on to others before realizing they had it.