Schools
Winchester Schools Receiving Rapid Coronavirus Tests From State
The rapid tests deliver results in about 15 minutes and could help schools identify positive cases quicker, state officials said.
WINCHESTER, MA — Rapid coronavirus testing supplies will be distributed to 134 Massachusetts school districts, and Winchester was one of the districts selected for the program, state education officials announced Wednesday.
The supplies are expected to be sent to school districts, charters and special education collaboratives by early December, said Jeffrey Riley, the commissioner of the Department of Elementary and Secondary Education.
Winchester Schools are still hammering out the details of how the kits will be used, according to Superintendent Judith Evans.
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"We applied as a district so that we could gain access to rapid tests for symptomatic staff members and students," Evans told Patch, "The tests will enable our school community to learn quickly whether someone is COVID-19 positive so that they can take the proper precautions before completing more formal testing."
Winchester Schools have had a total of 40 confirmed COVID-19 cases as of Tuesday. Of those 40 cases, 33 have recovered and seven are still active. The town as a whole has had a total of 256 confirmed COVID-19 cases.
Find out what's happening in Winchesterfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
Qualifying schools had to meet several requirements, including offering some in-person learning, having the ability to report test results to the Department of Public Health and training for staff administering the rapid tests.
"By testing students and teachers and getting results within minutes, we will be able to identify infected individuals and their close contacts more quickly and to help stop any spread," Riley said in a news conference Wednesday.
The voluntary program provided test kits to schools at no cost to the districts. Riley said the program uses the Abbott BinaxNOW rapid testing system, which was distributed to Massachusetts and other states under a contract with the federal government.
The rapid tests deliver results in about 15 minutes, but Riley noted they can be less reliable than a traditional COVID-19 tests that gets sent to a lab. This means the tests will only be used on students and staff who are already showing COVID-19 symptoms. A parent or guardian will also have to give consent for their child to take the test.
"Under federal guidelines, at this time, the Abbott BinaxNOW test is not to be used for broad-scale asymptomatic (testing) in schools and students, parents and staff should be aware that an antigen test result are not considered at this time diagnostic," Riley said. "Results are probable and confirmation of a person's COVID-19 status requires a PCR test."
Patch reporter Jimmy Bentley contributed to this story.
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