The problem: Americans aren’t getting tested for Covid-19 enough to help public health officials more easily track the spread of new variants like omicron. The obvious solution: Provide Americans with the rapid, at-home tests that are widely available in other developed countries.
Why not just provide the tests free or for a nominal fee like in other countries?
Well, sort of. White House chief of staff Ron Klain announced on Twitter last week that President Joe Biden would be announcing “FREE and RELIABLE at home tests.” Except the program is more complicated than that, a fact that highlights the uniquely American approach to health care that has plagued this plague response for over a year.
White House press secretary Jen Psaki fielded a question at Monday’s daily briefing about the multistep scheme that the Biden administration has put into place, which requires private insurance companies to reimburse people for the full costs of tests: Why not just provide the tests free or for a nominal fee like in other countries?
MS. PSAKI: Should we just send one to every American? Q Maybe. I’m just asking you — there are other countries — MS. PSAKI: Then what — then what happens if you — if every American has one test? How much does that cost, and then what happens after that? Q I don’t know. All I know is that other countries seem to be making them available for — in greater quantities, for less money. MS. PSAKI: Well, I think we share the same objective, which is to make them less expensive and more accessible. Right?
Psaki’s mocking tone did the White House few favors when you consider that, yes, ideally the federal government should be sending free antigen tests to every American. As many have pointed out, that’s what the United Kingdom does. In fact, Brits can order a pack of seven tests every day at zero cost. If they’re presenting even mild symptoms, they can also order a free PCR test, which takes longer but is more reliable.
Jen Psaki somewhat mockingly asks reporter at the White House Daily Press Briefing if the US should be sending out rapid #COVID19 tests to every household.
— Matt Karolian (@mkarolian) December 6, 2021
In the UK you can order 1 pack (containing 7 tests) everyday. https://t.co/ErnSsiLxxl pic.twitter.com/L7ruKWdy5n
In Germany, a program that provided free weekly tests was phased out in October, aiming to encourage more Germans to get vaccinated. But tests are still readily available and are cheap: roughly $1 versus the nearly $20 you might pay for the Abbott Laboratories BinaxNOW two-pack in the U.S. — if you find it on sale, that is. Or for sale at all for that matter; the supply of at-home tests has so far lagged way behind the demand. (Anecdotally, two weeks ago, I checked three local pharmacies in my neighborhood in Queens and came up empty-handed.)
Even if you do find a full-price test available, under the newly announced U.S. plan, you won’t be able to just walk out of the store with it. First, you’ll have to have some kind of private health insurance. Then, you’ll have to save the receipt and file it with the insurance company that you surely have, a task that Americans love to do and perform without complaint. (I can only hope my pure, unbridled sarcasm came through in that last clause.)
You also have to be aware of the program in the first place, which is no guarantee. That’s only one of the potential issues with the White House plan, experts told NBC News’ Laura Egan:








