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WATCH: Chief medical officer announces rapid tests for some Ontario schools

Testing is for school-age children in areas where COVID-19 transmission rates are high

Ontario's Chief Medical Officer of Health, Dr. Kieran Moore, announced the province will support rapid antigen testing for unvaccinated students in some schools across Ontario. 

The province will be leaving the choice for which schools get rapid tests up to the local medical officers of health and the tests will be reserved for schools and child care centres in areas with higher rates of COVID transmission. 

A news release from the province included the following information for the program. 

COVID-19 rapid antigen screening for child care and school-age children will proceed as follows:

  • Based on the guidance of the Chief Medical Officer of Health, local Medical Officers of Health will continue to monitor local COVID-19 transmission and vaccination rates to identify when to implement rapid antigen screening in parts of their region based on local factors and needs.
  • Rapid antigen screening will be used only for unvaccinated asymptomatic students and children who are not high-risk contacts. Symptomatic or high-risk contacts should continue to access lab-based PCR testing available at assessment centres and other collection centres.
  • Where the local public health unit has identified schools or child care centres that would benefit from this screening, rapid antigen screening tests will be made available. Parents will be able to choose if their unvaccinated asymptomatic children will participate in this screening offered by their schools or licensed child care settings.
  • Unvaccinated children participating in the program will be able to conduct the rapid antigen screening at home with instructions.
  • Children who receive a positive result will be required to seek a confirmatory lab-based PCR test at a local assessment centre or specimen collection centre and isolate until the result of that lab-based PCR test is known. Children who receive a negative result on a rapid antigen screening test will be able to continue in-person learning. More detailed information including duration and frequency will follow.