pensnest: six marshmallows in a rough tower; each has woeful, zombified features (Zombie marshmallows)
[personal profile] pensnest
We both participate in the Covid-19 study via app, and it asked me to get a test done. (I'd had mild hayfever symptoms and then strained a muscle in my back, so reporting these symptoms must have tripped a switch somewhere. I'm pretty sure I don't have the virus.)

I thought it might be of interest to those in the UK who haven't had a test to know what happens, so here goes.

Booking it is relatively easy - you have the option of getting a home test or going to a drive-through. All the home tests for the day were gone (query - why? What I received is what someone at home would receive—can't they afford the postage?) but I managed to book for tomorrow (ie, today) in a time block convenient to me. Doing it this way obviously means you have to be able to get there by car, so may not be helpful to anyone. They also tell you to take hand sanitiser/antiseptic wipes, photo ID and a bar code which they email to you. I printed mine off, which turned out to be a good call as the soldier had to read and scan it through the car window. You also need a tissue, which wasn't mentioned, but I always have one. And a mobile phone, see next paragraph.

We drove over there and were greeted by a man in Army casuals, mask and plastic apron (pegged to the trousers!), and were presented with a phone number to call so as to speak to the chap without any exchange of air. I showed him my printed-off bar code and confirmed my name and date of birth (he didn't ask to see ID at any point). He posted the plastic-wrapped test through the rear window, and we moved along to park properly. The whole thing took place in a car park just outside Diss, about twenty miles from here—I was a bit surprised that there was nowhere more convenient to Norwich, but perhaps they don't want people popping in for a test for no good reason. Anyway, a sunny drive through Norfolk in minimal traffic is not an unpleasant experience.

The package contained an eight-page leaflet of instructions. Eight! We read it earnestly. There was a certain amount of fumbling about, as there were six items in the pack besides the instruction leaflet. It is difficult to keep track of *six* items when you're sitting in a car. Having a companion along for the ride is definitely helpful and I recommend it—Beast was able to read the instructions to me step by step as I fumbled with a long poky thing and various potions and tried very hard not to touch anything else. If both of you have the test done at the same time, I strongly recommend doing it one at a time rather than in parallel!

So, on to the fun part. After hand sanitising, clear your nose and cough into a tissue, then use the swab. It's like a cotton bud that grew to twice the normal height. You poke around your tonsils for ten seconds—this is not at all nice and made me want to gag—and then stick it up your nose and rotate it for another 10-15 seconds. Ick. Then stick it into a little vial half-filled with fluid, and snap off the end of the swab so that it fits and you can put the lid back on. This then goes into a plastic ziplock bag along with a bit of absorbent thick tissue paper.

There are bar codes, one of which goes onto the vial, another of which goes onto the outside of the biohazard bag into which you put the ziplock bag. At this point, we drove round to the exit point, another phone call to the chap with the instructions, who checked that this and that had been done correctly and scanned our bar codes, then told us to seal the biohazard bag. This was then posted through a narrow gap in my front window into a large box held gingerly at arms length, and we were done.

If Beast is asked to get tested, or if I have to go again, I think an in-car table of some sort will be very useful, so we will take one of our lap trays, suitably disinfected, and put the array of Stuff onto that, which will stop the frantic where-did-it-get-to when we couldn't find the ziplock bag. So I recommend this to you. So much Stuff! The instructions were perfectly clear, and everything went smoothly (except the feeling of a cotton bud scraping against my tonsils, ick).

This has been a public service announcement.

Date: 2020-05-22 06:47 pm (UTC)
From: [personal profile] gwenhwyfar1984
That sounds surprisingly easy but terrible at the same. My mom has to have one before her surgery and is not looking forward to it.

Date: 2020-05-24 01:06 am (UTC)
From: [personal profile] gwenhwyfar1984
Yeah, my mom will go to a drive-through test site and a nurse will do it.
This was extremely helpful! I read it to her.

Date: 2020-05-22 10:06 pm (UTC)
wenchpixie: (stock writing coffee)
From: [personal profile] wenchpixie
Sounds unpleasant, but relatively straighforward and fairly quick at least. Did they say how long you'd need to wait for the results?

thank you for the summary - I'm not a driver, but I'm near one of the really big central testing centres and work for a frontline organisation (although I am merely front line adjacent) so apparently I should get patient transport if I need it, rather than a home kit, so I suppose it would be similar.

Date: 2020-05-27 06:31 pm (UTC)
wenchpixie: (stock flower float)
From: [personal profile] wenchpixie
I'm glad to hear it - and that was pretty speedy, which is great :)

Date: 2020-05-23 01:57 am (UTC)
frausorge: Joey Fatone in a green jacket, looking down and smiling broadly (the inward eye)
From: [personal profile] frausorge
It is interesting to hear how that's being done! I haven't been tested myself but saw a post from a neighbor on Nextdoor who said that they had had the swab stuck into their nose by a nurse in full PPE suit standing outside their car window.

Go you for supporting the study, in any case, and all good wishes for your health!

Date: 2020-05-25 05:45 pm (UTC)
turlough: castle on mountain top in winter, Burg Hohenzollern ((babylon 5) thoughtful)
From: [personal profile] turlough
Sounds like quite a surreal experience. Also, the Army casuals & mask & plastic apron outfit sounds both hilarious and scary.

Date: 2020-05-26 11:46 am (UTC)
turps: (Default)
From: [personal profile] turps
It's good to read you tested negative.

Kayleigh had to get tested a week or so ago, and her experience pretty much mirrored yours. Strangley she was the most taken aback by having to blow her nose in front of a stranger.

Date: 2020-06-09 06:06 pm (UTC)
antisoppist: (Default)
From: [personal profile] antisoppist
Thank you. I've just come back to find this as I got an invite via the app and have booked a test at Taunton race course tomorrow morning. I am worried about having to find my tonsils with a stick. I've had shivers and a mild sore throat and shortness of breath and exhaustion since late March. Still happening off and on if I do anything energetic like walking to a shop. Nothing that counts as an official Covid symptom and I feel it's a bit late to test me now really but it might help science somehow.

Nothing has mentioned having to take a phone but thanks to your account, I will.

April 2026

S M T W T F S
   1234
567 891011
12131415161718
19202122232425
2627282930  

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Apr. 8th, 2026 11:22 pm
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios