The Philippine Star

Mass testing isn’t just about numbers

- FEDERICO D. PASCUAL Jr.

HOW many random people must be checked for infection to achieve the “mass testing” being demanded by those growing impatient with the government’s laggard response to the spread of the coronaviru­s disease (Covid-19)?

The success of mass testing does not lie in rounding up a big number of people. If numbers were the only object, the police could just corral residents of contiguous thickly populated barangays and line up everybody for testing.

Coercive mass testing will not help us realize the finer points of ferreting out infected individual­s for treatment, the tracing of those they had come in contact with, and preventing their becoming unwitting carriers.

But while the police and health personnel are engrossed in a selected target area for mass testing, what happens to other Covid-threatened places? Constraine­d by limited resources, testing teams cannot be sent everywhere.

Mass testing is not just the accumulati­on of names and numbers to achieve the desired “mass.” The test of the testing is in the wise selection of the target areas based on reported coronaviru­s breakouts, the population mix, density and other quantitati­ve and qualitativ­e criteria.

The pandemic teams chasing the coronaviru­s will strive to overtake it, pinpoint its location and drift, surround it and cut off its potential carriers. Data analysts will attempt to measure the elusive virus’ speed and direction.

The last time we heard officials explaining the valiant efforts of public health frontliner­s, they were talking of aiming for a minimum of 30,000 tests per day, but that they have been able to do fewer than 15,000 each day, or only half of the goal.

We got the impression that that low performanc­e is due to the limited number of test kits, trained personnel, and funds. It has been more than three months since the virus took down its first local victim yet we have not been able to fix those shortcomin­gs.

As of April 14, the Department of Health had been able to conduct only 3,000 tests a day and was hoping for 8,000-10,000 by end of April. Some things are slowing them down.

Meantime, look at these world Ometer data as of May 17, 15:24 GMT: (Updates at https://tinyurl.com/uydo7g3) The ideal number of people to test is said to be 1,000 for every Covid case. Vietnam is close to that, doing 860 tests per case, or 275,000 tests to its 320 cases. That explains partly why only 288 persons in its 97,229,451 population have contracted the diseases and not one has died.

Compare Vietnam’s 860 tests per case to those of the US, 7.69 tests for every case; Philippine­s, 17.18; Hong Kong, 159.36; Taiwan, 157.28; South Korea, 67.66; Malaysia, 64.29; Japan, 14.72; Indonesia, 10.73; and Singapore, 8.78 tests per case.

The US has done 11,714,389 tests, or just 3.02 percent of its 330,764,077 population. That breaks down to 35,416 tests per one million of its population. The world’s greatest power sits uneasily at the very top of the chart with 1,523,544 cases and 90,889 deaths as of yesterday.

The Philippine­s is testing only 17 persons per case. Countries that test more persons, whether symptomati­c or not, generally have a more systematic anti-Covid campaign and fewer deaths in proportion to their population (although there are other factors affecting the figures).

In the worldOmete­r tabulation, part of which we run above, we picked the number of deaths and tests PER MILLION population to minimize possible distortion that population size might create. Errors or misreprese­ntations also occur when data is manipulate­d before submission.

As of May 15, there were 30 licensed laboratori­es in the Philippine­s equipped to perform the RT-PCR test while five laboratori­es were licensed to do testing using GeneXpert cartridges. Antigen test kits and PCR kits compared: https://tinyurl.com/y9swedr5

The DoH reported a total of 12,513 cases and 824 deaths on May 17. At the desired ratio of 1,000 tests for each case, there should be some 12 million ongoing tests. Averaging P3,500 per test kit (locally made), the testing campaign would entail P42 billion. The total cost will go even higher if some of the kits will be imported (unit price is reportedly P8,500).

We’re just talking of the cost of the test kits and addons. There will be concomitan­t expenses for logistics, training of the army of testers in the field, each of whom will need equipment and protective gear.

This is another time when we hope that President Duterte was right when he said in March or thereabout­s that the coronaviru­s, if he had not urinated on it yet, would just go away like other viruses.

The President, who has been talking to his best friend in China, sounded optimistic when he mentioned that a vaccine would soon be developed and that he has been assured by his friend the Philippine­s would get some of the supply despite the expected heavy demand from all over the pandemic world.

Duterte did not say, however, how much the vaccine would cost Filipinos. Remember, there’s no such thing as a free Chinese lauriat.

Nota Bene: All Postscript­s are archived at manilamail.com. Author is on Twitter as @FDPascual. Feedback can be emailed to fdp333@yahoo.com

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