Police Magazine Logo
MenuMENU
SearchSEARCH

DetectaChem's Quick and Easy COVID Test

The MobileDetect Bio BCC19 can test officers, non-sworn employees, and prisoners in just 30 minutes.

DetectaChem's Quick and Easy COVID Test

The MobileDetect Bio (DetectaChem) BCC19 COVID testing system includes the testing reagent, swabs, saline, PCR strips, and the thermal cycler for heating the material. A yellow result is positive and red is negative. It works with the MobileDetect app for documentation.

4 min to read


Since March 2020, when we learned that China’s “Coronavirus Disease” had entered the United States, more than half a million Americans have died in the pandemic. Included in that horrific death count are more than 450 law enforcement officers, according to the National Fraternal Order of Police.

From the beginning of the pandemic, law enforcement officers and other first responders have been among some of the most at risk Americans. Agencies took a variety of steps to protect their personnel during the height of the crisis. They closed public areas of stations, held roll calls outside, sent non-sworn and even some sworn personnel home, reduced officer contact with the public through online reporting tools and relaxed traffic enforcement. But before the development of the three vaccines currently being shot into millions of American arms, law enforcement agencies had no real defense against COVID, other than masks and distance.

Ad Loading...

There were two likely sources of COVID exposure for officers and deputies: fellow law enforcement personnel and suspects and subjects. Even knowing that sick suspects and sick officers were great hazards to healthy officers, there was only so much agencies could do about these threats. If an officer felt sick, they could be sent home. If other officers were exposed to the sick guy, they could be quarantined. What law enforcement agencies and other public entities, including schools, needed was a quick and easy COVID test.

And that’s why DetectaChem decided to leverage its colorimetric drug and explosive detection and identification technology to create a COVID testing system. Sold through DetectaChem’s MobileDetect Bio subsidiary, the BCC19 Coronavirus testing system received an Emergency Use Authorization from the FDA last summer.

DetectaChem’s Chief Operating Officer Travis Kisner says the company’s COVID test is extremely accurate. “We were 100% on accuracy,” he says. “We hit correctly on every sample for both positive and negative results.”

There are two predominant methods used in COVID-19 testing, antigen and molecular. Antigen tests look for proteins found on the surface of the virus. In contrast and in very simple terms, molecular tests use polymerase chain reaction (PCR) to search for the molecular sequence and genetic sequences of the virus. MobileDetect Bio’s BCC19 is a molecular test, using polymerase chain reaction (PCR) assay to detect if a person has the virus. “Molecular testing is very accurate because it looks for the exact pattern of the SARS COV-2 virus,”Kisner says.

The BCC19 test is not only accurate, it’s extremely easy to use. Kisner says the test can be done by individual officers on themselves. However, it probably should be administered by someone with a medical background, especially when testing prisoners. “Law enforcement agencies usually have a relationship with the local fire department and EMS. The fire department or EMS has trained personnel who can help them out,” Kisner says.

Ad Loading...

Unlike some other COVID-19 tests, the MobileDetect Bio test is painless for the subject. It does not require a nasopharyngeal swab—the all the way up the nose swab that people find uncomfortable. A lower nasal or even oral swab will do. Kisner recommends the lower nasal swab. “It just feels like a Q-tip in your lower nose, and it doesn’t hurt,” he says.

Once the swab is taken, the testing process is very simple. The user puts reagent in a vessel on a PCR test strip. The material from the swab is added to the reagent and then heated for 30 minutes in MobileDetect Bio’s thermal cycler. Users then check the color of the heated material and determine if the subject is positive or negative for COVID. If the material turns yellow, it’s positive. Red is a negative indicator. Each PCR strip can hold 8 samples, and the heater can accommodate up to 12 strips, meaning that an agency can test 96 samples in 30 minutes.

Speed is one of the benefits of the BCC19. Some molecular tests can take hours or even days to get results. Part of the reason it takes so much time to get results from some molecular tests is logistical. The samples have to be sent out to labs. And that is one of the selling points for the MobileDetect Bio test, it can be used on premises. “If you empower your agency to have the capability to run your own test, then you don’t have to wait,” Kisner says, explaining that the testing speed can be critical for a law enforcement agency. “The concern is that you could lose half of your police force to exposure and quarantine,” Kisner says.

The MobileDetect Bio BCC19 is designed to work with DetectaChem’s MobileDetect smartphone app. When used to detect drugs and narcotics, the app is used to assess the color of the results. The COVID test does not require the app for color assessment, but users can access the MobileDetect app to record the results and auto-generate reports with time, date, pictures, virus information, GPS location and more.

MobileDetect Bio is considering the development of rapid testing systems for other diseases. “That’s certainly a possibility,” Kisner says.   

Ad Loading...
Subscribe to our newsletter

More Technology

Fans cheer at Saban Field at Bryant-Denny Stadium during a football game at The University of Alabama.
TechnologyApril 23, 2026

The University of Alabama Rolls Out Couter-Drone Technology

The University of Alabama is using D-Fend Solutions as a counter-drone technology supplier for campus and game-day airspace security. The University integrates D-Fend’s EnforceAir into its Emergency Operations Center (EOC), utilizing a unified command framework to collaborate with local, state, and federal partners during major events.

Read More →
Man working in front of multiple computer screens.
TechnologyApril 22, 2026

Motorola Solutions Now Part of the Cyber Threat Alliance

Motorola Solutions is now part of the Cyber Threat Alliance, the first formally organized nonprofit group of cybersecurity practitioners that work together in good faith to share threat information and improve global defenses against advanced cyber adversaries.

Read More →
Bar chart showing what police departments spend budget on for security.
TechnologyApril 22, 2026

Genetec 2026 State of Physical Security Report Reveals Public Safety Priorities & Challenges

Survey results from Genetec’s 2026 State of Physical Security Report highlight the demand for integrated systems that improve response times and reduce investigative workload. Nearly nine in 10 respondents said they use security data to help keep officers safe.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
Tinted blue background image of traffic with inset images for an ALPR camera, a police dispatcher, and a logo for Flock Safety.
TechnologyApril 16, 2026

Flock Safety Introduces Audit Assistance, Its Latest Trust & Compliance Tool

Audit Assistance is the latest tool in the Flock Trust & Compliance suite, a first-of-its-kind set of products and services that provides communities with guardrails and customization for accountability, transparency, and responsible use of the Flock platform.

Read More →
image of one closed laptop and one open laptop with Toughbook logo on screen, all against a blue gradient background
TechnologyApril 16, 2026

Panasonic Connect Launches the Toughbook 56

The Toughbook 56, the latest rugged laptop from Panasonic Connect, delivers enhanced performance, refined design, new levels of security, and power-efficient workflows in demanding environments.

Read More →
Collection of traffic control signs against a city backdrop and logos for Radarsign and Sourcewell.
TechnologyApril 16, 2026

Radarsign Awarded Sourcewell Contract Expanding Access to Traffic Safety Solutions

Radarsign’s traffic safety portfolio, including radar speed signs, flashing beacon systems, and more, are now available through Sourcewell purchasing contracts.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
Rooftop view off a drone detection devise with two small rubber antennas with an view overlooking a large domed event venue.
TechnologyApril 9, 2026

D-Fend Solutions’ EnforceAir C-UAS System Secures Key Event with RF-Cyber Counter-Drone Technology

D-Fend Solutions deployed its EnforceAir C-UAS system in support of local police to help secure a 19,000-attendee event, leveraging its non-jamming approach to keep communications and authorized drones operational while safeguarding against rogue drone threats.

Read More →
Graphic showing four priorities for secure enterprise cloud adoption and a logo for Genetec.
TechnologyApril 2, 2026

Genetec Highlights Why Governance Defines Secure Cloud Adoption in Enterprise Physical Security

With World Cloud Security Day on April 3, Genetec outlines how enterprises can strengthen resilience as they modernize physical security in the cloud.

Read More →
police car geotab thumbnail for services whitepaper
SponsoredApril 1, 2026

Police Fleet Management: Boost Performance & Savings

Today’s police departments face rising fleet costs and must stay ready to respond, no matter the call. In this eBook, get powerful insights to enhance your police fleet’s cost-efficiency, reliability and performance through data-driven tactics.

Read More →
Ad Loading...
An automated license plate reader mounted on rear trunk of a car.
TechnologyMarch 26, 2026

Public Safety Surveillance Technology: Built on Compliance and Trust

ALPR solutions provider Leonardo explains why leveraging technology for safety must never come at the expense of constitutional rights or community trust. Every action within an ALPR system should be logged in a tamper-proof audit trail with query records of who accessed what data, when, and for what purpose.

Read More →