Fact Check: Donating Plasma Or Blood Is NOT Free Testing For The Coronavirus

Fact Check

  • by: Anne Brown
Fact Check: Donating Plasma Or Blood Is NOT Free Testing For The Coronavirus

Can people avoid expensive testing for the Coronavirus by getting their results from a blood or plasma center? No, that's not true. A claim quickly spreading on Facebook alleges Coronavirus testing costs in the thousands of dollars, and a way around the high cost is to find out for free by donating blood or plasma.

The claim, for example, surfaced in a post (archived here) where it was published on Facebook on March 3, 2020. The text in the post read:

It's almost $4,000 to get tested for Corona Virus without insurance.
If you donate plasma, they will test your blood for free and pay you. They HAVE to tell you if you come back positive for ANYTHING.
Stay safe and fuck big pharma. Reposting for awareness.

Facebook users saw this:

A version of the story also is found on Twitter, claiming the US is charging over $3,000 per test while South Korea is offering free tests to citizens and non-citizens as a part of their emergency response.

Here is an screenshot of a tweet, since deleted but archived here, making that claim:screenshot_91.png

Despite deleting that tweet, it still surfaces on Twitter. For example:

The information contained on both Facebook and Twitter is false, according to reports here, here and here. While any trip to the doctor or emergency room can rack up a big price tag even with medical insurance, currently the test available for the Coronavirus is free.

As of Thursday, March 5, 2020, the Surgeon General announced that the FDA has cleared 46 state labs along with the CDC as authorized test administrators.

After a series of questions and exams by a doctor, anyone under suspicion for having contacted the virus has a nasal or throat swab, and the sample is sent for testing at no cost to the patient.

The CDC works closely with state and local public health officials, the travel industry and others to identify and test people who may be infected. According to the CDC, two types of tests are performed on the samples it receives:

Molecular tests, which look for evidence of active infection; and Serology tests, which look for previous infection by detecting antibodies to MERS-CoV. Serology tests are for surveillance or investigational purposes and not for diagnostic purposes.

Here are the CDC's guidelines on specimen collection. And here is more information about the test itself.

Some companies are scrambling to come up with commercial tests for the virus, which would likely come at a cost, but none have been approved as of this writing, according to Bloomberg news.

The Red Cross and plasma donation centers have strict eligibility requirements and a lengthy screening process for donating plasma or blood, including excluding people who are ill or have traveled out of the country to certain areas.

According to information on the Red Cross wesbite:

DO NOT DONATE TO GET A TEST!

If you think you may be at risk for HIV/AIDS or any other infection, do not donate simply to get a test. ASK us where you can be tested outside the blood center.

The following symptoms can be present before an HIV test turns positive:

  • Fever
  • Enlarged lymph glands
  • Sore throat
  • Rash

DO NOT donate if you have these symptoms!

WHAT HAPPENS AFTER YOUR DONATION

To protect patients, your blood is tested for several types of hepatitis, HIV, syphilis, and other infections. If your blood tests positive, it will not be given to a patient. There are times when your blood is not tested. If this occurs, you may not receive any notification. You will be notified about any positive test result which may disqualify you from donating in the future. The blood center will not release your test results without your written permission unless required by law (example: to the health department).

We maintain a confidential list of people who may be at risk for spreading transfusion-transmitted diseases. By continuing this process, you consent to be entered in this confidential list of deferred donors if you are at risk for spreading such diseases. When required, we report donor information, including test results, to health departments, military medical commands, and regulatory agencies. Donation information may also be used confidentially for research related to blood safety.

The Red Cross offers tips for dealing with the deadly Coronavirus outbreak here:

Lead Stories has reached out to the Red Cross for comment about the false posts on Twitter and Facebook.

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Lead Stories is working with the CoronaVirusFacts/DatosCoronaVirus Alliance, a coalition of more than 100 fact-checkers who are fighting misinformation related to the COVID-19 pandemic. Learn more about the alliance here.


  Anne Brown

Anne Brown, a staff writer and fact-checker for Lead Stories, is the former Senior Director of Special Events at CNN. Over the course of her 30-plus year career in television news based at CNN’s world headquarters in Atlanta, she covered major events both domestic and international, winning Emmy and Peabody awards along the way.  Brown led on-location production and logistics teams through events ranging from long-standing political events to breaking news, and everything in between: Royal weddings, state funerals, POTUS overseas trips, summits, inaugurations, trials, hurricanes, Super Bowls and many debates. She has a Journalism degree from Northeastern University and a passion for finding trails to the truth.

 

Read more about or contact Anne Brown

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