Indonesia deploys COVID-19 breath test detectors at train stations

A commuter takes her air-sample to be tested for the COVID-19, in Jakarta
A woman wearing a protective mask blows a plastic bag as she takes her air sample to be tested for the COVID-19 using the GeNose detection tool at a train station in Jakarta, Indonesia on Feb 3, 2021. (Photo: Reuters/Ajeng Dinar Ulfiana)

JAKARTA: Indonesia on Wednesday (Feb 3) rolled out COVID-19 breath test detectors at train stations.

The detectors, known as GeNose, was developed by the University of Gadjah Mada (UGM), which says it detects the reaction between the coronavirus and body tissue in the respiratory tract with at least 95 per cent accuracy.

Subjects are required to blow into a bag and the result is available in just two minutes.

A similar breath test for COVID-19, SpiroNose, developed by a Dutch health technology company, is being rolled out in the Netherlands to speed up its testing process.

GeNose underwent clinical trial at a Yogyakarta hospital in May 2020 and was approved for distribution in December. It differs from the polymerase chain reaction (PCR) swab tests and the rapid tests that extract blood with a prick of the finger.

Commuters take their air-samples to be tested for the COVID-19, in Jakarta
A man wearing a protective mask gives a plastic bag containing his air sample to be tested using GeNose, a COVID-19 detection tool, at a train station in Jakarta, Indonesia on Feb 3, 2021. (Photo: Reuters/Ajeng Dinar Ulfiana)

"It's a simple method and easier for me as sometimes, the rapid antigen test hurts slightly," said Mugi Hartoyo, 59, after taking the test in central Jakarta.

Indonesia has the biggest coronavirus battle in Southeast Asia, with about 1.1 million infections and more than 30,000 deaths, stretching its hospitals. Critics have said its testing, tracing and health protocols have been weak.

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The machine, sold at 68 million rupiah (US$4,850), is implanted with a memory of positive PCR swab test results, Kuwat Triyana, who heads the innovation team, told Reuters.

"This tool adapts the function of the human nose or of the sniffer dog's nose, which is to recognise the smell, or in this case to recognise the smell of the breath of a person who is confirmed with COVID, compared to people who are not," he said.

Those with positive readings are required to undergo a confirmatory PCR test.

Though it does have shortcomings, it could help detection efforts, said Dicky Budiman, an epidemiologist at Griffith University.

"On paper it's promising and has potential, I'd say. But the implementation is relatively not easy," he said, adding the machine needed to be programmed with precise data to ensure accuracy.

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Source: Reuters/jt