The Manila Times

US virus tests drop, death toll rises

- AP

NEW YORK: United States testing for the coronaviru­s is dropping even as infections remain high and the death toll rises by more than 1,000 a day, a worrisome trend that officials attribute largely to Americans getting discourage­d over having to wait hours to get a test and days or weeks to learn the results.

An Associated Press analysis found that the number of tests per day slid 3.6 percent over the past two weeks to 750,000, with the count falling in 22 states.

That includes places like Alabama, Mississipp­i, Missouri and Iowa where the percentage of positive tests is high and continuing to climb, an indicator that the virus is still spreading uncontroll­ed.

Amid the crisis, some health experts are calling for the introducti­on of a different type of test that would yield results in a matter of minutes and would be cheap and simple enough for millions of Americans to test themselves, but would also be less accurate.

“There’s a sense of desperatio­n that we need to do something else,” said Dr. Ashish Jha, director of Harvard’s Global Health Institute.

Widespread testing is considered essential to managing the outbreak as the US approaches a mammoth 5 million confirmed infections and more than 157,000 deaths out of over 700,000 worldwide.

Testing demand is expected to surge again this fall, when schools reopen and flu season hits, most likely outstrippi­ng supplies and leading to new delays and bottleneck­s.

Some of the decline in testing over the past few weeks was expected after backlogged commercial labs urged doctors to concentrat­e on their highest-risk patients. But some health and government officials are seeing growing public frustratio­n and waning demand.

In Iowa, state officials are reporting less interest in testing, despite ample supplies. The state’s daily testing rate peaked in mid-July but has declined 20 percent in the last two weeks. “We have the capacity. Iowans just need to test,” Gov. Kim Reynolds said last week.

Jessica Moore of rural Newberry, South Carolina, said that after a private lab lost her coronaviru­s test results in mid-July, she had to get retested at a pop-up site organized by the state.

Moore and her husband arrived early on a Saturday morning (late Saturday in Manila) at the site, a community center, where they waited for two hours for her test. Moore watched in the rear-view mirror as people drove up, saw the long line of cars, and then turned around and left.

“If people have something to do on a Saturday and they want to get tested, they’re not going to wait for two hours in the South Carolina heat for a test, especially if they’re not symptomati­c,” Moore said.

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