This week, my wife visited NYC and our son. He had a Cue COVID tester which provides PCR nucleic acid amplification test (NAAT) results in 20 minutes or less. The device and tests are expensive, but I wonder if anyone on the Forum has experience with them (or similar).
Please note that I’m not asking for medical advice. If it matters, please assume that my wife and I are at elevated risk for COVID complications and that we are double vaxxed and boostered.
His employer provided the tests and I believe that Google also does that. We would be doing this on our own nickel.
https://cuehealth.com/products/how-cue- ... lsrc=aw.ds
Edited to fix false characterization as a PCR test.
Anyone check into Cue COVID testing? NOT MEDICAL ADVICE PLEASE
- TomatoTomahto
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Anyone check into Cue COVID testing? NOT MEDICAL ADVICE PLEASE
Last edited by TomatoTomahto on Fri May 27, 2022 3:32 pm, edited 2 times in total.
I get the FI part but not the RE part of FIRE.
Re: Anyone check into Cue COVID testing? NOT MEDICAL ADVICE PLEASE
Cue is a nucleic acid amplification test (NAAT) not a PCR (polymerase chain reaction).
I guess it all could be much worse. |
They could be warming up my hearse.
Re: Anyone check into Cue COVID testing? NOT MEDICAL ADVICE PLEASE
This is going to be an impossible discussion without going into medical advice. You don't need internet strangers to search pubmed for you but here is a study that seems to be free of financial conflicts of interest:
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articl ... f/main.pdf
Missed about 9% of positives. Small sample.
Everyone has to determine their own risk tolerance, but the difference between types of tests is like the difference between types of bonds. Not meaningless but probably less important than things you can more easily and completely control (stock/bond allocation being the metaphor for masks/avoidance/etc).
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articl ... f/main.pdf
Missed about 9% of positives. Small sample.
Everyone has to determine their own risk tolerance, but the difference between types of tests is like the difference between types of bonds. Not meaningless but probably less important than things you can more easily and completely control (stock/bond allocation being the metaphor for masks/avoidance/etc).
Re: Anyone check into Cue COVID testing? NOT MEDICAL ADVICE PLEASE
A 9% false negative rate means that this particular test has very poor sensitivity.
- TomatoTomahto
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Re: Anyone check into Cue COVID testing? NOT MEDICAL ADVICE PLEASE
I can Google this myself, but do you know what comparable “test at home” results are?
I get the FI part but not the RE part of FIRE.
Re: Anyone check into Cue COVID testing? NOT MEDICAL ADVICE PLEASE
Variable, but have been reported as low at 80%. But you can't just say 91% (or even 80%) sensitivity is "poor" in a vacuum. If you're testing 2000 people before they get on a cruise ship you don't want too many false negatives. If you are seeing a small group of vaccinated asymptomatic people then it doesn't matter as much.TomatoTomahto wrote: ↑Fri May 27, 2022 3:32 pmI can Google this myself, but do you know what comparable “test at home” results are?
- oldcomputerguy
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Re: Anyone check into Cue COVID testing? NOT MEDICAL ADVICE PLEASE
Topic locked for moderator review.
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Re: Anyone check into Cue COVID testing? NOT MEDICAL ADVICE PLEASE
Upon further review, this thread will remain locked. Questioning the accuracy of test results constitutes medical advice. See: Medical Issues
Questions on medical issues are beyond the scope of the forum. If you are looking for medical information online, I suggest you start with the Medical Library Association's User's Guide to Finding and Evaluating Health Information on the Web which, in addition to providing guidance on evaluating health information, includes a list of their top recommended sites.