At-home coronavirus tests roll out with funding from Bill Gates

Bill Gates is funding a new program to provide at-home coronavirus testing kits to residents in the Seattle area. The initiative aims to help researchers better understand how COVID-19 spreads through communities. 

“In any fight, it’s important to know your enemy. Unfortunately, in our battle against COVID-19, there’s a lot that we still don’t know,” the Microsoft co-founder wrote in a blog post on Tuesday. “More testing, of course, will help us answer them. But with tests in short supply in many parts of the world, including the U.S., it is impossible to test everyone—at least for now.” 

In the blog post, Gates also said he is funding a first-of-its-kind disease surveillance program called the Seattle Coronavirus Assessment Network (SCAN) to detect cases of COVID-19 in the greater Seattle area — the first hotspot of the outbreak in the United States. SCAN allows people to collect their own nasal samples using a self-swab test and then ship them to a lab — all without ever leaving home. The program is testing both healthy and sick people, Gates said. 

Scanning for answers to a pandemic by Bill Gates on YouTube

“The key advantage of this at-home testing approach is that people don’t need to go to a clinic, where they risk exposing themselves or others to infection,” Gates said. 

The program is not meant to act as a replacement for medical care, and it doesn’t aim to test every single person in the region, Gates emphasized. Instead, he hopes the results, in addition to demographic data like age, race, gender, ZIP code and pre-existing health conditions, will provide a clearer picture of how the virus is “moving through the community, who is at greatest risk, and whether physical distancing measures are working.” 

Gates said that, by testing a large group of both healthy and sick people from diverse backgrounds, researchers will have a better understanding of what groups are at a higher risk of infection and how social distancing has slowed the spread. 

According to Gates, SCAN is already testing 300 people per day. He said early results have already found many cases of infected people with mild symptoms that would have otherwise gone undetected. 

Seattle residents interested in taking part in the program can apply on its website starting Wednesday, May 13. Those chosen will be mailed an at-home test kit and given access to SCAN’s online portal to view their results. 

Extended interview: Bill Gates on coronavirus pandemic

Gates did not say whether he plans to bring the program to other cities. He is funding it privately, and through his investment firm, Gates Ventures, and foundation. The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation previously said it is donating $300 million toward global efforts to combat COVID-19. 

SCAN is operating in partnership with the Seattle and King County Public Health Department and five local health institutions: The Brotman Baty Institute, the University of Washington School of Medicine, the Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, the Institute for Disease Modeling and the Seattle Children’s Hospital. 

The Gates Foundation has been working in partnership with Seattle public health officials to roll out more testing since early March, when Washington state had the highest number of known cases in the U.S. 

“COVID-19 has started behaving a lot like the once-in-a-century pathogen we’ve been worried about,” Gates said back in February, after years of warning about the threat a global pandemic could pose. “I hope it’s not that bad, but we should assume it will be until we know otherwise.”

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