I think it would be a good policy to always mention the country in the title (or tag it or wharever). Though yeah, not a mystery which one they're talking about here lol
Theres not a single person here that didnt know this was the US given how specific the number of tests were. Any other country would have done something sensible.
For the better part of a year or two the Fed was requiring insurance companies to reimburse people for tests they bought, up to 8 a month. It was a pain in the ass, but my wife and I were testing weekly for free back in late 2021.
That's awesome! We need more monitoring. It's the only way we'll know what is actually going on. There's a lot to be said for testing sewage effluent, and not every state can afford that.
Only time I got them, it took two weeks to arrive (making it useless to test if you think you had symptoms), and expired in a month (making it almost useless to keep on hand 'just in case').
For the specific use case of going on a pre-planned trip and making sure you're healthy just before leaving? Great. But that's now how the program was presented to the end users.
What? Ever since they were widely available and free, the idea is to keep a supply of them at the ready so you can test any time you're feeling symptomatic.
As the other comment said, yes they have expiration dates. However many have been extended so check before throwing them out. Some that I got around the time the program first started (I think) aren't due to expire until next March, so yours may very well still be good depending when you got them.
Though of course not as scary anymore and not in the news as much, it's still around. Not that many people care where I live, I think most are "over it"