Latest News

Federal program offers free COVID, flu at-home tests, treatments


 

The U.S. government has expanded a program offering free COVID-19 and flu tests and treatment.

The Home Test to Treat program is virtual and offers at-home rapid tests, telehealth sessions, and at-home treatments to people nationwide. The program is a collaboration among the National Institutes of Health, the Administration for Strategic Preparedness and Response, and the CDC. It began as a pilot program in some locations this year.

“With its expansion, the Home Test to Treat program will now offer free testing, telehealth and treatment for both COVID-19 and for influenza (flu) A and B,” the NIH said in a press release. “It is the first public health program that includes home testing technology at such a scale for both COVID-19 and flu.”

The news release says that anyone 18 or over with a current positive test for COVID-19 or flu can get free telehealth care and medicine delivered to their home.

Adults who don’t have COVID-19 or the flu can get free tests if they are uninsured or are enrolled in Medicare, Medicaid, the Veterans Affairs health care system, or Indian Health Services. If they test positive later, they can get free telehealth care and, if prescribed, treatment.

“I think that these [telehealth] delivery mechanisms are going to be absolutely crucial to unburden the in-person offices and the lines that we have and wait times,” said Michael Mina, MD, chief science officer at eMed, the company that helped implement the new Home Test to Treat program, to ABC News.

ABC notes that COVID tests can also be ordered at covidtests.gov – four tests per household or eight for those who have yet to order any this fall.

A version of this article appeared on WebMD.com .

Recommended Reading

Is air filtration the best public health intervention against respiratory viruses?
MDedge Infectious Disease
New CDC advisory once again flags BA.2.86 COVID variant
MDedge Infectious Disease
All-oral regimen succeeds for rifampin-resistant tuberculosis
MDedge Infectious Disease
COVID vaccination protects B cell–deficient patients through T-cell responses
MDedge Infectious Disease
Patients exposed to HIV, hepatitis at Massachusetts hospital
MDedge Infectious Disease
COVID vaccines lower risk of serious illness in children
MDedge Infectious Disease
Global measles deaths increased by 43% in 2022
MDedge Infectious Disease
New COVID variant JN.1 could disrupt holiday plans
MDedge Infectious Disease
Why Are Prion Diseases on the Rise?
MDedge Infectious Disease
New KDIGO guideline encourages use of HCV-positive kidneys for HCV-negative recipients
MDedge Infectious Disease