Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The Binax tests are about $11 each. So if you need 500 tests/week, knowing there will be some opt-outs, I'd say if you could donate about $50k through your PTA, find a way to source that many rapid tests, and get a group of parent volunteers to help kids administer them, you could probably get through the next couple months.
You need to do binax twice over 18 hours as per the insert in Order to consider it a negative test. That makes it $22.
That’s what they cost all of us shopping at CVS.
The cost to the DCPS for a large bulk purchase would be far cheaper.
The Shield T3 testing K-12 that DCPS (and it sounds like many charters) is doing costs $35/test processed, according to their website. https://www.shieldt3.com/k12/
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The Binax tests are about $11 each. So if you need 500 tests/week, knowing there will be some opt-outs, I'd say if you could donate about $50k through your PTA, find a way to source that many rapid tests, and get a group of parent volunteers to help kids administer them, you could probably get through the next couple months.
You need to do binax twice over 18 hours as per the insert in Order to consider it a negative test. That makes it $22.
That’s what they cost all of us shopping at CVS.
The cost to the DCPS for a large bulk purchase would be far cheaper.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The Binax tests are about $11 each. So if you need 500 tests/week, knowing there will be some opt-outs, I'd say if you could donate about $50k through your PTA, find a way to source that many rapid tests, and get a group of parent volunteers to help kids administer them, you could probably get through the next couple months.
You need to do binax twice over 18 hours as per the insert in Order to consider it a negative test. That makes it $22.
Anonymous wrote:The Binax tests are about $11 each. So if you need 500 tests/week, knowing there will be some opt-outs, I'd say if you could donate about $50k through your PTA, find a way to source that many rapid tests, and get a group of parent volunteers to help kids administer them, you could probably get through the next couple months.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You could encourage parents at your school to utilize DC's "Test yourself" program and test their kid at home every week. That's what we intend to do. You can even get the test kits ahead of time and then you just drop them off in one of the drop boxes when you do it. It's free and really easy.
Is it as good as 100% testing of the entire population? No. But if you can get enough families willing to do it (and provide them with information on how to do it and how easy it is), then you could seriously impact the school's ability to track Covid. We are doing it for our peace of mind, but I also view it as a public service to the school community, so we know we aren't sending an asymptomatic kid to school and so we can report any positive test sooner than we might if we waited for symptoms or for the school to test (assuming we're in the 10% which I still don't know if we will be).
How do you do this? I know I can get at home covid tests at libraries/community centers, but I thought those had to be returned the same day you get the test kit. Is that what you plan to do? (I would love to test my child at home every week, just trying to figure out the logistics)
Anonymous wrote:You could encourage parents at your school to utilize DC's "Test yourself" program and test their kid at home every week. That's what we intend to do. You can even get the test kits ahead of time and then you just drop them off in one of the drop boxes when you do it. It's free and really easy.
Is it as good as 100% testing of the entire population? No. But if you can get enough families willing to do it (and provide them with information on how to do it and how easy it is), then you could seriously impact the school's ability to track Covid. We are doing it for our peace of mind, but I also view it as a public service to the school community, so we know we aren't sending an asymptomatic kid to school and so we can report any positive test sooner than we might if we waited for symptoms or for the school to test (assuming we're in the 10% which I still don't know if we will be).
Anonymous wrote:DCPS is a lot bigger than any charter, which makes the logistics harder -- that's a lot of tests to process. If you want more testing, you should let DCPS and the Mayor know.
Anonymous wrote:You could encourage parents at your school to utilize DC's "Test yourself" program and test their kid at home every week. That's what we intend to do. You can even get the test kits ahead of time and then you just drop them off in one of the drop boxes when you do it. It's free and really easy.
Is it as good as 100% testing of the entire population? No. But if you can get enough families willing to do it (and provide them with information on how to do it and how easy it is), then you could seriously impact the school's ability to track Covid. We are doing it for our peace of mind, but I also view it as a public service to the school community, so we know we aren't sending an asymptomatic kid to school and so we can report any positive test sooner than we might if we waited for symptoms or for the school to test (assuming we're in the 10% which I still don't know if we will be).