tclubber
Active Member
What matters is not the percentage of false positives among all positive tests, but the percentage of false positives among all tests (both negative and positive ones). Because this would be the chance of a non-infected person being prevented from traveling by a false positive.Also that 1% number says nothing. If 1% is still let's say 500.000 positive tests and around 40% is false positive
This ratio cannot obviously be higher than the ratio of all positive tests, since they include both true and false positives. So if the ratio of all positive tests was around 1% in late summer-early Sept, it means the danger of being prevented from traveling by a false positive is less than 1%. So it's a non-issue for a single traveler or a couple. It could be an issue for a large group though.