Arab Times

Rethink on virus testing:

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Some senators now say they’d like lawmakers to be tested for the coronaviru­s, just days after congressio­nal leaders declined an offer of 1,000 tests from the Trump White House.

Without testing, “We’re disease vectors,” Sen. Angus King, I-Maine, said Wednesday, adding that Washington is a hot spot for the infection.

The remarks by King and others underscore the pressures facing lawmakers as the U.S. remains seriously short of the amount of testing experts consider necessary. Many members of Congress face higher risks because they’re older and travel often, but they’re also loathe to be seen as getting special access to a scarce resource.

“It’s totally responsibl­e to have tests, not just to protect us but to protect all the other people that are involved in that travel,” said Sen. Roy Blunt, R-Mo. He said lawmakers and congressio­nal staff should be tested, but without “taking resources away from other people.”

On Tuesday, Sen. Lamar Alexander, chairman of the Senate health committee, said that with more testing becoming available, he expected “attitudes to change quickly” about the decision to rebuff the White House offer of tests. Alexander, RTenn., said lawmakers’ travel back and forth to Washington “creates a highly efficient virus spreading machine.”

One senator and seven House members have reported testing positive for the disease. At least 19 congressio­nal employees, including eight Capitol Police officers, have also tested positive, according to a letter last week by Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif.

Despite assurances by President Donald Trump that the U.S. had all the testing it needs, public health experts say the country is far short of the tests needed to detect and control fresh outbreaks. The virus is continuing to spread across the country, with over 1.2 million confirmed cases of COVID-19, the disease the virus causes, and more than 72,000 deaths.

While more and faster tests are becoming available, many doctors’ offices and labs have been overwhelme­d by demand and long backlogs have been common. A gradual reopening of businesses in some states is likely to increase infections and exacerbate the problem. (AP)

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