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MHA calls on provincial government to provide free COVID-19 rapid tests

Mount Pearl-Southlands MHA Paul Lane says the provincial government should follow other provinces and offer more rapid tests free, as the eligibility for PCR tests is restricted.

Paul Lane says it costs residents a lot to get rapid tests

Independent MHA for Mount Pearl-Southlands Paul Lane says he wants to know if the decision to not disperse more rapid tests is a budgetary one. (Henrike Wilhelm/CBC)

As Newfoundland and Labrador moves away from PCR testing for COVID-19, one MHA is asking if the decision not to make rapid tests more widely available is a budgetary one.

During a media briefing Friday, Chief Medical Officer of Health Janice Fitzgerald said restricting PCR testing to vulnerable populations was necessary in order for the province's health-care system to return to normal.

"Health-care staff have been redeployed to COVID swabbing and bookings for two years now," she said. With up to 2,000 tests being processed every day, Fitzgerald said, it's time for laboratories to "refocus." 

"We have to refine the approach to testing to ensure it is used in the most appropriate way possible," she said.

In a briefing Friday, Chief Medical Officer of Health Janice Fitzgerald said it's time for the health-care system to get back to normal, which means moving away from mass COVID-19 testing. (Government of Newfoundland & Labrador)

PCR testing is limited to household contacts, non-household contacts with symptoms and those with symptoms who are at an increased risk of severe disease, live or work in congregate setting, or deal directly with patients.

Those who are excluded from these categories have few options other than buying a rapid test out of pocket.

Situation 'obviously concerning,' says MHA

While Fitzgerald said three million rapid tests have been distributed to the community through schools, health-care centres, congregate living facilities, corrections services and more, Independent MHA Paul Lane said the province should be paying to make them available to everyone.

"When we eliminate an option like PCR testing to control this virus, it's obviously concerning to me," he said.

Lane said his constituents in Mount Pearl-Southlands have been complaining about the cost of rapid tests. One in particular, he said, spent $240 on them in a single month. 

Lane said residents of other provinces don't have to worry about the cost.

"Every other province in the country is providing rapid tests free of charge to the general public," he said.

"We're all one country — we should be treated equally and fairly."

Lane wonders whether other provinces have kept the supply stocked by supplementing federal contributions themselves.

"If that's what it is," he said, "then the minister needs to come out and tell the people of Newfoundland and Labrador that every other province is supplementing their supply, and we're not, because of budgetary reasons."

Tests should be used in 'most effective way possible'

While there's no shortage of rapid tests in the province, said Fitzgerald, what's most important is that they be used effectively.

"What other jurisdictions have found when it's just been sort of open and available to everyone, the tests get depleted very quickly and they're not being used necessarily in the most effective way possible," she said.

"Right now we are using tests for symptomatic people in the general population, and we've had that in our school programs."

Despite restrictions to testing eligibility and the elimination of contact tracing, Fitzgerald said, the province still has plenty of ways to detect the degree of COVID-19 spread.

"It's not everybody getting tested, but at this point, we can still monitor things quite well without needing to know every single case that's in the province," she said.

Read more from CBC Newfoundland and Labrador

With files from Henrike Wilhelm