Home : Articles : Resource Directory

Viewing Page: Home

Home Testing Kits: DNA, HIV and Drugs

Recent changes and advances in both medical technology and in the legal frame work which governs the use of home testing has resulted in a large range of home test kits.

Paternity Testing

Testing children for drugs

Personal Health Care

HIV

Aids

Job Screening

 


Search For Health and Fitness Guides

 

FDA Comments On Home Testing

As you might expect the FDA has it's opinions on home diagnostic testing and proves some advice for anyone who decides that there is a home test that they want to try.

More and more Americans are playing doctor in the privacy of their own bathrooms, using a few drops of blood or a urine sample to test for cholesterol, blood glucose, or evidence of colon or rectal cancer. In fact, a snippet of a child's hair now can confirm the use of illicit drugs.

Often seen as a less expensive and a more convenient alternative to a trip to the doctor's office, self-testing diagnostic and monitoring devices are booming in sales. Devices such as blood-glucose tests and blood-pressure kits make it easier for people to self-monitor conditions such as diabetes and hypertension. However, this technology-driven trend is not without limits and could result in serious problems for those who rely on the tests instead of on the expertise of their health-care provider. A recent shift in the home diagnostics market--from monitoring chronic illnesses to diagnosing serious or potentially fatal diseases--is raising red flags among health professionals.

For years, pregnancy tests and ovulation predictors dominated the home test kit market. While these devices still generate large numbers of self-care sales, other tools of the medical trade are fast becoming available outside the doctor's office--no prescription needed. Spiraling health-care costs, increased interest in preventive health care, and a desire for privacy are paving the way for products that now include screening for the virus that causes AIDS and for drugs of abuse.

Screening tests often are used at home to check for symptoms of a disease when they may not be readily apparent. For example, people can measure their cholesterol and triglyceride levels--two types of fats in the blood--to help minimize the risk of cardiovascular disease.

 

Benefits & Limitations of Home Testing

Home test kits are, in many cases, as inexpensive as a co-payment to a doctor and a lot less time-consuming. Some can provide speedy results. Women often use home pregnancy test (HPT) kits for these reasons, as well as for the convenience of testing at home. Some women prefer to know for sure that they are pregnant before visiting their physicians, and HPT kits can help confirm pregnancy earlier. An earlier confirmation provides an opportunity for health-care providers to counsel women about their options, and to discourage potentially harmful behaviors, such as smoking and use of alcohol or drugs.

Kidney disease is one of the most devastating complications of diabetes, but it's also detectable and treatable in its earliest stages. A home test kit allows people with diabetes to test for glucose and even small amounts of protein in their urine--an early sign of kidney dysfunction.

Jim Watson, R.Ph., a pharmacist at the CVS pharmacy in Gaithersburg, Md., says that in his experience, blood glucose monitoring systems and home pregnancy tests are among the most popular tests purchased for home use.

"Diabetics already know they have the disease and so they test their blood sugar levels several times a day," he says. By contrast, Watson says, although women may only use a pregnancy test once, they are still one of the most popular tests the store sells. Sales of both HIV and drug screening home tests are infrequent, according to Watson.

One sign of their overall increasing popularity is the fact that many pharmacists are moving home test kits from behind their counters onto free-standing displays. The lure of the Internet is also helping to make these devices more readily available.

Steven Gutman, M.D., director of the Food and Drug Administration's clinical laboratory devices division, says that consumers need to be wary about buying and using the kits on their own. "People need to carefully read the test-kit labeling and instructions, where important information and warnings about the product are listed," he says. Among other things, this information tells how a test works, and what to do when it doesn't. Home test kits are meant to be an adjunct to doctor visits, not a replacement for them. "Although the menu of home testing products has expanded," Gutman says, "the advice is still the same."


Categories

Adult Onset Diabetes
American Diabetes
Answer Pregnancy Test
Beat Drug Test
Best Pregnancy Test
Blood Drug Test
Blood Pregnancy Test
Cheap Dna Paternity Test
Cheap Paternity Test
Child Diabetes
Childhood Diabetes
Cinnamon Diabetes
Diabetes 2
Diabetes And Pregnancy
Diabetes Association
Diabetes Cure
Diabetes Food
Diabetes Gene
Diabetes Insulin
Diabetes Medication
Diabetes Medicine
Diabetes Mellitus Type 2
Diabetes Nutrition
Diabetes Org
Diabetes Recipe
Diabetes Research
Diabetes Symptom
Diabetes Test
Diabetes Treatment
Dna Home Test
Dna Paternity Test
Dna Test
Drug And Alcohol Test
Drug Screen Test
Drug Test
Drug Test Detox
Drug Test Kit
During Pregnancy Test
Early Pregnancy Test
Employment Drug Test
Fact Plus Pregnancy Test
False Positive Drug Test
False Pregnancy Test
Free Drug Test
Free Hiv Test
Free Paternity Test
Free Pregnancy Test
Hair Drug Test
Hair Follicle Drug Test
Hcg Pregnancy Test
Herbs For Diabetes
Hiv Blood Test
Hiv Home Test
Hiv Test Kit
Home Aids Test
Home Blood Test
Home Cholesterol Test
Home Dna Test
Home Health Test
Home Mold Test
Home Paternity Test Kit
Juvenile Diabetes
Juvenile Diabetes Foundation
Kit Pregnancy Test
Legal Dna Paternity Test
Legal Paternity Test
Online Pregnancy Test
Oral Drug Test
Pass Drug Test Free
Pass Drug Test Urine
Passing Drug Test
Paternity Blood Test
Paternity Test
Pcr Hiv Test
Positive Drug Test
Pre Diabetes
Pregnancy Result Test
Pregnancy Take Test When
Pregnancy Test
Pregnancy Test Urine
Prenatal Paternity Test
Rapid Hiv Test
Saliva Drug Test
Sugar Diabetes
Swab Drug Test
Urine Drug Test
Ways To Pass A Drug Test

 

Home : Articles : Resource Directory Heart Rate Monitors