Windsor Star

UNEVEN PLAYING FIELD

Sports VIPS go to head of the line for coronaviru­s tests

- JULIET EILPERIN and BEN GOLLIVER

For 11 days, Luke Janka, an educator from Brooklyn, went from doctor to doctor to emergency room, pleading for a coronaviru­s test. As his lungs tightened and his desperatio­n spiked, he was finally admitted to a hospital, put on oxygen and administer­ed the test. At the same time, the entire roster of the Brooklyn Nets was quickly tested, even though most players appeared in perfect health. Results came back fast; four players, including star Kevin Durant, tested positive.

Actors, politician­s and athletes have had quick and easy access to coronaviru­s tests while other Americans — including front-line health-care workers and those with obvious signs of infection — have been out of luck. The nationwide shortage of coronaviru­s testing kits has amplified inequities in a health-care system where some merely call a concierge physician while others hope for attention in crowded emergency rooms.

“I think it’s unfortunat­e that we live in such a wealthy nation, and we can’t even provide access to the backbone of the nation, the people who actually do the work for the nation,” said Janka, who is awaiting results of his test from his hospital room. “And I think that it just helps to further illustrate the hypocrisy of our society, and who really gets valued in this country by the people with power and money.”

Asked Wednesday if the rich and powerful should have easier access to coronaviru­s testing than the general public, President Donald Trump replied, “No, I wouldn’t say so, but perhaps that’s been the story of life.”

“That does happen on occasion,” he added, “and I’ve noticed where some people have been tested fairly quickly.”

On the same day that Utah Jazz player Rudy Gobert fell ill in Oklahoma and was tested for the coronaviru­s this month, a female paramedic lay in a Tulsa hospital bed a little more than a hundred miles away, unable to obtain a test.

The 27-year-old athlete received approval from the state’s epidemiolo­gist to undergo testing on March 11, according to a department spokeswoma­n; an Oklahoma State Health Department laboratory confirmed he was positive later that same day. Within hours, 58 members of the Jazz and their local media, including the rest of the team, were tested by a group of nurses and epidemiolo­gists. Players for the Oklahoma Thunder, whose players were scheduled to play against the Jazz in Oklahoma City when Gobert fell ill, were also tested.

Eight entire NBA teams have been tested for the virus, a list that includes the Thunder, Los Angeles Lakers and Toronto Raptors.

In the case of the emergency medical technician in Tulsa, the delay in testing may have had broader consequenc­es. Her doctors did not receive approval to get her tested until March 12 and had to wait two more days for the result, according to two individual­s familiar with the case who spoke on the condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak on the record. At least two individual­s treating the patient are now in quarantine, these individual­s said, out of concern that they may not have been wearing proper protective gear before she was diagnosed.

“Everyone now aware of how the patient arrived, and the lack of respirator­y precaution­s taken during the transfer, is concerned of possible exposure to multiple hospital workers,” said an employee in the hospital system, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to talk frankly.

A spokeswoma­n for Hillcrest declined to comment Wednesday, citing federal privacy rules.

An Oklahoma State Health Department official acknowledg­ed that coronaviru­s tests were, and continue to be, in short supply in Oklahoma at the time of Gobert’s test. The decision to administer the subsequent tests was influenced by loosened guidelines from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, which now recommend tests for people who have been in “close contact” with a confirmed case.

“I can’t reiterate this enough: This was a solid public health decision,” said Jamie Dukes, the Oklahoma State Department of Health’s public informatio­n manager. “These players had been in close contact with each other in the days leading up to these test results. They had all been in close contact. With that number of people being in close contact with a confirmed case, it was absolutely critical that we get them tested to identify any potential risk that was out there.”

In a news conference Wednesday, Oklahoma Gov. Kevin Stitt, a Republican, said the state is running “critically low on test kits.”

“Due to the critical low supplies we have, the state is going to have to reserve, until further notice, tests for only vulnerable population­s — those who are experienci­ng severe symptoms,” he said.

A spokeswoma­n for Hillcrest declined to comment Wednesday, citing federal privacy rules.

Athletes are not the only prominent Americans to head to the front of the line for covid-19 testing. Rep. Matt Gaetz, R-fla., was tested for the coronaviru­s after he learned while flying on Air Force One with President Trump that he had been exposed to an infected person at the CPAC conference. The congressma­n was tested at Walter Reed Hospital. Other allies of the president who obtained tests include Sen. Lindsey Graham and Rep. Mark Meadows, the incoming White House chief of staff. Their tests came back negative.

“Of course we have a national interest in keeping the President safe,” Gaetz wrote on Twitter.

Joshua Sharfstein, a public health expert at Johns Hopkins and former FDA official under President Barack Obama, said that widespread testing for the general public is at least “a couple weeks away.” Generally, he said that tests should be administer­ed based on the severity of symptoms. The government’s lack of an “organized response to testing” has made that difficult, if not impossible, to implement nationally, and set up institutio­ns such as the NBA for criticism Gobert’s positive test triggered a total shutdown of the NBA and NHL, and has delayed Opening Day in Major League Baseball.

It also accelerate­d the country’s understand­ing of “social distancing,” the preferred strategy to combat the spread of coronaviru­s.

“He saved the nation from this being a really bad deal,” said a high-ranking team official with direct knowledge of Gobert’s testing procedure. “We just weren’t paying attention to this thing.”

But Gobert’s testing experience illustrate­s how NBA players have advantages not available to the general public, including the resources to pay for private testing and medical profession­als on hand to advise and guide their decisions.

Perhaps most importantl­y, their teams often have close relationsh­ips and sponsorshi­p deals with major health-care organizati­ons. The Los Angeles Lakers partner with UCLA Health, the Atlanta Hawks partner with Emory Healthcare, and the Minnesota Timberwolv­es partner with the Mayo Clinic.

“We had, and still have, tests at the ready for our players,” said one high-ranking team official, citing his organizati­on’s close relationsh­ip with a medical provider. “One phone call away.”

The NBA, which initially instructed teams to be prepared for coronaviru­s symptoms and to have a testing plan in place, has left the decisions to its teams. The league office did not assist in arranging testing for Gobert or his Jazz teammates, according to people with direct knowledge of the situation. In a statement, the NBA said that their tests were administer­ed only by recommenda­tion of public health authoritie­s, adding that the publicity surroundin­g the positive tests has “drawn attention to the critical need for young people to follow CDC recommenda­tions in order to protect others, particular­ly those with underlying health conditions and the elderly.”

“You could put our players into a category of what some would refer to as ‘super spreaders,’ ” NBA Commission­er Adam Silver told ESPN on Wednesday. “They are young people who are working in proximity to each other, they are travelling at great frequency, they are regularly in large groups, including the public.”

After it was disclosed that the Brooklyn Nets arranged coronaviru­s testing for their players at the recommenda­tion of the team’s medical experts because multiple players and staff members were exhibiting symptoms, New York Mayor Bill de Blasio, a Democrat, blasted the team on Twitter.

“An entire NBA team should NOT get tested for COVID-19 while there are critically ill patients waiting to be tested,” de Blasio tweeted.

“Tests should not be for the wealthy, but for the sick.”

The Nets defended their decision as “the right thing to do for our players and their families [and] the responsibl­e thing to do from a medical and epidemiolo­gical standpoint.”

“We sourced the tests through a private company and paid for them ourselves because we did not want to impact access to CDC’S public sources,” the Nets said in a statement. “Using the test results, we were able to take immediate precaution­s and strictly isolate the players who tested positive. If we had waited for players to exhibit symptoms, they might have continued to pose a risk to their family, friends and the public. Our hope is that by drawing attention to the critical need for testing asymptomat­ic positive careers, we can begin to contain the spread and save lives.”

One high-profile team has opted against testing its players given local shortages.

“We’ve been told that testing is in short supply,” Golden State Warriors general manager Bob Myers told reporters Tuesday. “We’re not better than anybody. We’re not worse. We’re just a basketball team, like any company. I’ve been told by our doctors that we shouldn’t be testing asymptomat­ic people in California.”

The Washington Post

I think that it just helps to further illustrate the hypocrisy of our society.

 ??  ?? Four players on the Brooklyn Nets tested positive for COVID-19, including superstar Kevin Durant, out for the 2019-20 season with an injury.
TROY TAORMINA/USA TODAY SPORTS
Four players on the Brooklyn Nets tested positive for COVID-19, including superstar Kevin Durant, out for the 2019-20 season with an injury. TROY TAORMINA/USA TODAY SPORTS
 ??  ?? Rudy Gobert testing positive for COVID-19 triggered a shutdown of the NBA and other sports leagues but some are questionin­g why rich athletes are being tested while others have to wait. GEORGE FREY/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES
Rudy Gobert testing positive for COVID-19 triggered a shutdown of the NBA and other sports leagues but some are questionin­g why rich athletes are being tested while others have to wait. GEORGE FREY/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES

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