Asian Reporter web extra, October 18, 2020

People wait in line for coronavirus testing at Dodger Stadium
in Los Angeles in this July 14, 2020 file photo. After months of
struggling to ramp up coronavirus testing, the U.S. is now
capable of testing some 3 million people daily thanks to a
growing supply of rapid tests. But the testing boom comes with a
new challenge: keeping track of the results. (AP Photo/Mark J.
Terrill, File)
Millions more virus rapid tests, but are
results reported?
By Matthew Perrone
The Associated Press
www.asianreporter.com
October 18, 2020
WASHINGTON (AP) — After struggling to ramp up coronavirus
testing, the U.S. can now screen several million people daily,
thanks to a growing supply of rapid tests. But the boom comes
with a new challenge: keeping track of the results.
All U.S. testing sites are legally required to report their
results, positive and negative, to public health agencies. But
state health officials say many rapid tests are going
unreported, which means some new COVID-19 infections may not be
counted.
And the situation could get worse, experts say. The federal
government is shipping more than 100 million of the newest rapid
tests to states for use in public schools, assisted living
centers, and other new testing sites.
"Schools certainly don’t have the capacity to report these
tests," said Dr. Jeffrey Engel of the Council of State and
Territorial Epidemiologists. "If it’s done at all it’s likely
going to be paper-based, very slow and incomplete."
Early in the outbreak, nearly all U.S. testing relied on
genetic tests that could only be developed at high-tech
laboratories. Even under the best circumstances, people had to
wait about two to three days to get results. Experts pushed for
more "point-of-care" rapid testing that could be done in doctors
offices, clinics, and other sites to quickly find people who are
infected, get them into quarantine, and stop the spread.
Beginning in the summer, cheaper, 15-minute tests — which
detect viral proteins called antigens on a nasal swab — became
available. The first versions still needed to be processed using
portable readers. The millions of new tests from Abbott
Laboratories now going out to states are even easier to use:
they’re about the size of a credit card and can be developed
with a few drops of chemical solution.
Federal health officials say about half of the nation’s daily
testing capacity now consists of rapid tests.
Large hospitals and laboratories electronically feed their
results to state health departments, but there is no
standardized way to report the rapid tests that are often done
elsewhere. And state officials have often been unable to track
where these tests are being shipped and whether results are
being reported.
In Minnesota, officials created a special team to try and get
more testing data from nursing homes, schools, and other newer
testing sites, only to be deluged by faxes and paper files.
"It’s definitely a challenge because now we have to do many
more things manually than we were with electronic reporting,"
said Kristen Ehresmann, of the Minnesota Department of Health.
Even before Abbott’s newest BinaxNOW rapid tests hit the
market last month, undercounting was a concern.
Competitors Quidel and Becton Dickinson have together shipped
well over 35 million of their own quick tests since June. But
that massive influx of tests hasn’t showed up in national
testing numbers, which have mostly ranged between 750,000 and
950,000 daily tests for months.
Besides tallying new cases, COVID-19 testing numbers are used
to calculate a key metric on the outbreak: the percentage of
tests positive for COVID-19. The World Health Organization (WHO)
recommends countries test enough people to drive their percent
of positives below 5%. And the U.S. has mostly been hovering
around or below that rate since mid-September, a point that
President Donald Trump and his top aides have touted to argue
that the nation has turned the corner on the outbreak. The
figure is down from a peak of 22% in April.
But some disease-tracking specialists are skeptical. Engel
said his group’s members think they aren’t getting all the
results.
"So it may be a false conclusion," he said.
One of the challenges to an accurate count: States have
wildly different approaches. Some states lump all types of tests
together in one report, some don’t tabulate the quick antigen
tests at all, and others don’t publicize their system. Because
antigen tests are more prone to false negatives and sometimes
require retesting, most health experts say they should be
recorded and analyzed separately. But currently the vast
majority of states do not do that and post the results online.
The federal government is allocating the tests to states
based on their population, rather than helping them develop a
strategy based on the size and severity of their outbreaks.
"That’s just lazy" said Dr. Michael Mina of Harvard
University. "Most states won’t have the expertise to figure out
how to use these most appropriately."
Instead, Mina said the federal government should direct the
limited test supplies to key hot spots around the country,
driving down infections in the hardest-hit communities. Keeping
tighter control would also ensure test results are quickly
reported.
Johns Hopkins University researcher Gigi Gronvall agrees
health officials need to carefully consider where and when to
deploy the tests. Eventually, methods for tracking the tests
will catch up, she said.
"I think having the tools to determine if someone is
infectious is a higher priority," she said.
AP data journalist Nicky Forster contributed to this story.
The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives
support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute’s Department of
Science Education. The AP is solely responsible for all content.
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