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French pharmacies to sell home Covid-19 tests from April

Pharmacies in France will be able to sell home Covid-19 tests to those who want to buy them from April 12th, France's Health Minister Olivier Véran said on Friday.

French pharmacies to sell home Covid-19 tests from April
(Photo by Christophe ARCHAMBAULT / AFP)

In an interview that was broadcast on Facebook, Véran said only pharmacies would be allowed to sell them, explaining it was still important that a health professional explained how to use the home-testing kits. 

The new tests still involve a nasal swab, but are quicker and less unpleasant than the ones carried out by healthcare staff – the cotton bud does not go in to the nose so far – and will allow people to easily test themselves for Covid-19 at home.

However, if the home test shows a positive result, people will still need to have a PCR test to confirm this.

This is because of the PCR test’s higher sensitivity, but also for isolation and contact-tracing purposes, and so that any variants can be identified.

READ ALSO: How France’s new Covid home-testing kits work

The autotests or, literally, ‘self-tests’ were approved on March 16th by the French national health authority HAS and it was expected they would go on sale that same week.

Self-tests are already in use in the UK, Austria, Germany and Portugal, but France has been hesitant, keen to ensure they were sufficiently accurate before rolling them out.

HAS said that initial data showed that the self-tests were 80-95 percent accurate for people with symptoms.

This compares with a 98 percent accuracy level for laboratory PCR tests. However, PCR tests take 48 hours to give a result, far longer than the DIY test’s 30 minutes.

However, hopes they would also be on sale in supermarkets to increase accessibility were dashed.

READ ALSO: What changes about life in France in April 2021

In the interview, Véran also said that France had not yet reached the peak of the epidemic.

The rolling seven-day average of daily new confirmed Covid-19 cases. Source: Our World in Data.

With current measures, he expected France to reach the peak – the point at which the number of cases starts to drop – in mid-April, with intensive-care cases peaking two weeks later.  

On April 2nd, almost 40,000 new cases were recorded, the highest daily level since last November.

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HEALTH

France’s Covid-19 app to be ‘put to sleep’

France's Covid-tracker app, used for months for the all-important 'health pass' will be switched off today, health officials have confirmed.

France’s Covid-19 app to be 'put to sleep'

Covid-19 screening in France reaches an important milestone on Friday, June 30th, 2023 – when the TousAntiCovid app is officially ‘put to sleep’.

The app, which was launched in June 2020 as France came out of its first lockdown of the pandemic and has undergone a number of iterations, including as a delivery device for the health pass, will be switched off. 

For most people, this anniversary will pass without mention. Few people have consulted the app in recent months, and it has sat dormant on many smartphones since France’s Covid-19 health pass requirement was suspended in March 2022.

Meanwhile, the Système d’Informations de DEPistage (SI-DEP) interface – which has been informing people about their test results since the Spring of 2020 – is also being shut down on June 30th, as per legal requirements.

The SI-DEP shutdown means that it will also be impossible to retrieve Covid test certificates issued before June 30th, should the need arise. All data held by the database will be “destroyed”, officials have said.

It has handled more than 320 million antigen and PCR tests since it was introduced.

This does not mean that testing for Covid-19 has stopped, or is now unnecessary. As reported recently, more than 1,000 deaths a week in Europe are still caused by the virus.

The shutdown of the national information system does not mean that people in France cannot still book an appointment for an antigen test at a pharmacy, or a PCR test at a laboratory. But the number of people going for testing is declining rapidly. In recent days, according to Le Parisien, just 15,000 people in France took a Covid test – the lowest number, it said, since the pandemic started.

Reimbursement rules for testing changed on March 1st, with only certain categories of people – minors, those aged 65 and over, or immunosuppressed patients – covered for the entire cost of testing.

From Friday, only PCR test results will be transmitted to authorities for data purposes, meaning pharmacists that only offer antigen testing will be locked out of the online interface to record test results.

The reason for the shift in priorities is to maintain “minimal epidemiological surveillance”, the Ministry of Health has reportedly told scientists.

As a result test certificates, showing a positive or negative result, will no longer be issued from July 1st. Since February 1st, anyone taking a test has had to give consent to share their data in order to obtain a certificate. 

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