Live Blog

Brazilian regulators approve Covid self-testing kits

Brazil’s federal health regulator Anvisa has approved the emergency use of Covid self-testing kits in the country. The decision creates an exception, as Brazil doesn’t allow self-tests for any disease of which cases must be reported to the authorities.

The decision will not have any immediate effect, as each company hoping to sell its self-testing kits in Brazil must apply for authorization from Anvisa, which will analyze each case individually.

While multiple countries see self-testing kits as an effective way to monitor the spread of the coronavirus and allow people to isolate themselves quicker, their approval in Brazil raises many questions about how results will be monitored.

According to the rules voted on by regulators, positive diagnoses from these kits will not be considered as confirmed cases. Instead, authorities will recommend that people seek medical attention and take a more accurate RT-PCR test. If people don’t do that, Brazil’s official case numbers would almost certainly be vastly undercounted. 

Parts of the U.S. are already struggling with inconsistent monitoring, which prevents authorities from having an accurate sense of Covid prevalence.

Brazil’s seven-day average of new daily cases continues to break records every day, with over 500,000 confirmed infections between Wednesday and Thursday alone.

Lucas Berti

Lucas Berti covers international affairs — specialized in Latin American politics and markets. He has been published by Opera Mundi, Revista VIP, and The Intercept Brasil, among others.

Recent Posts

Petro’s far-fetched train project to compete with the Panama Canal

Panama was once a part of Colombia. Its canal, a monumental engineering achievement of its…

9 hours ago

Market Roundup: The new skills corporate board members need

The specialization trend among corporate board members It is not only a matter of perception:…

1 day ago

As elections near, what’s next for Panama’s closed copper mine?

Panama will hold its presidential elections on Sunday, months after huge protests saw thousands descend…

1 day ago

Madonna concert to inject BRL 300 million into Rio economy

The city of Rio de Janeiro estimates that a Madonna concert this Saturday on Copacabana…

2 days ago

Panama ready to vote as Supreme Court clears frontrunner

Latin America’s trend of banning opposition candidates from elections has caught on in an ever-growing…

2 days ago

Sabesp privatization edges closer with São Paulo legislation

The São Paulo City Council on Thursday approved legislation authorizing Brazil’s largest city to sign…

2 days ago