Author: Anne Louise Wyllie; John Fournier; Arnau Casanovas-Massana; Melissa Campbell; Maria Tokuyama; Pavithra Vijayakumar; Bertie Geng; M. Catherine Muenker; Adam J. Moore; Chantal B. F. Vogels; Mary E. Petrone; Isabel M. Ott; Peiwen Lu; Alice Lu-Culligan; Jonathan Klein; Arvind Venkataraman; Rebecca Earnest; Michael Simonov; Rupak Datta; Ryan Handoko; Nida Naushad; Lorenzo R. Sewanan; Jordan Valdez; Elizabeth B. White; Sarah Lapidus; Chaney C. Kalinich; Xiaodong Jiang; Daniel J. Kim; Eriko Kudo; Melissa Linehan; Tianyang Mao; Miyu Moriyama; Ji Eun Oh; Annsea Park; Julio Silva; Eric Song; Takehiro Takahashi; Manabu Taura; Orr-El Weizman; Patrick Wong; Yexin Yang; Santos Bermejo; Camila Odio; Saad B. Omer; Charles S. Dela Cruz; Shelli Farhadian; Richard A. Martinello; Akiko Iwasaki; Nathan D. Grubaugh; Albert I. Ko
Title: Saliva is more sensitive for SARS-CoV-2 detection in COVID-19 patients than nasopharyngeal swabs Document date: 2020_4_22
ID: lt7qsxxh_24
Snippet: Healthcare workers Healthcare workers were asked to collect a self-administered nasopharyngeal swab and a saliva sample every three days for a period of 2 weeks. Samples were stored at +4°C until being transported to the research lab......
Document: Healthcare workers Healthcare workers were asked to collect a self-administered nasopharyngeal swab and a saliva sample every three days for a period of 2 weeks. Samples were stored at +4°C until being transported to the research lab.
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