Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My child (who attends a school with top percentage of cases of COVID) who has been sick for a week. We have tested for COVID using the at home kit he was given at school and it came back negative. Are these kits accurate?
How’s your kid? Fine? Getting better? Great to hear it. The end.
Took child for testing with pediatrician. Flu with pneumonia. On meds and probably will be out for rest of week. Doctor says he was contagious prior to showing symptoms. With no masks, there are probably more cases at school. He needs to be fever free with no cough before doctor says he can return to school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My child (who attends a school with top percentage of cases of COVID) who has been sick for a week. We have tested for COVID using the at home kit he was given at school and it came back negative. Are these kits accurate?
How’s your kid? Fine? Getting better? Great to hear it. The end.
Anonymous wrote:My child (who attends a school with top percentage of cases of COVID) who has been sick for a week. We have tested for COVID using the at home kit he was given at school and it came back negative. Are these kits accurate?
Anonymous wrote:So much misinformation here. The rapid antigen tests are highly accurate when you follow the instructions and use both tests. They'll pick up 90% of cases within 48 hours of when you'd otherwise test positive on a PCR test.
People were quick to write off rapid tests for Omicron based on a single early study. Subsequent studies showed they do just as well against Omicron as Delta.
Anonymous wrote:There's a high false negative rate with all antigen tests. Get a PCR