Home Health Care Everlywell gets green light to sell at-home Covid-19 test kit without prescription

Everlywell gets green light to sell at-home Covid-19 test kit without prescription

1
0
SHARE

Everlywell got an emergency use authorization from the FDA to sell its Covid-19 test kits without a prescription. Photo credit: Everlywell

The Food and Drug Administration ok’d another at-home Covid-19 test to be sold over the counter. At-home testing company Everlywell received an emergency use authorization from the Food and Drug administration on Wednesday to offer its Covid-19 test kits to patients without a prescription.

The Austin-based startup initially got the green light for its at-home test kits last May, but users still had to be screened by a doctor and have Covid-19 symptoms to purchase the test. Now, people without symptoms or known exposure to the virus will be able to use it.

“With the FDA’s support for this new indication, we can now serve even more Americans with Covid-19 testing that’s delivered right to their doors and available where they shop and work,” Everlywell CEO Julia Cheek said in a news release.

Users swab their nose and send in the sample, which is then processed at one of Everlywell’s partner labs. It takes one to two days to get results from the rt-PCR test. If users have a positive or an undetermined result, they’re contacted by a clinician.

On Everlywell’s website, tests are priced at $109 — generally more costly than most antigen test alternatives. The company also plans to partner with retailers to sell it over the counter.

Since the start of the pandeimc, the FDA has mostly limited tests to patients with Covid-19 symptoms, as tests of asymptomatic patients are more prone to false negatives.  But the agency has recently cleared a handful of at-home tests that don’t require prescriptions, including a rapid antigen test developed by Ellume.

In a summary of the EUA for Everlywell’s test kit, the FDA reported that 95% of test kits were sent to the lab successfully, while a small number lacked enough sample or had the incorrect name on the tube.

Before the pandemic, Everlywell shipped common wellness tests — such as STD tests, allergy and food sensitivity tests — to users’ homes. But since May, much of its business has been in distributing Covid-19 tests.

As of December, the company had distributed more than 500,000 at-home test kits. It also raised $175 million in new funding to back this effort. 

Source link

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

twenty − four =