Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

EQUAL ACCESS seen as issue in testing.

- CHRISTINE FERNANDO AND CAROLYN THOMPSON Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Jennifer Kelleher of The Associated Press.

The day after Amanda Serulneck found out she might have been exposed to covid-19, she visited a rapid testing center in New Jersey but was turned away because it ran out of tests.

She returned at 7 a.m. the next day. After she waited for an hour, officials said they had run out again. On her third try, Serulneck and her friend called several testing centers before driving for an hour to one with availabili­ty.

Lines for free covid-19 tests stretch for blocks and hours in cities where people feel the dual strain of the coronaviru­s surge and the approachin­g holidays. But an increasing number of popup clinics promise visitors instant results — at a cost. Some charge $150 or more for a spot at the front of the queue.

While her friend who lacked insurance had to pay $125 for the test, Serulneck’s price was only $35. The real cost came from the two days she had to take off from work, she said.

“People are just trying to get by, and they can’t be taking off work for a week to wait for results,” said Serulneck, who works at a spa. “People need rapid testing to be available and affordable.”

Dr. Mark Shrime said his work gave him the flexibilit­y to wait in line for six hours for a test in New York City earlier this month, but he knows not everyone can do the same.

“If I’m an hourly worker, I can’t take off six hours just so I can get a test so I can go back to work,” said Shrime, who needed a test to avoid a 14-day quarantine after traveling from Boston. “Another option was another place 10 blocks away from me where I could pay [$250] to get a rapid test, so the structure that we set up for people to be able to keep themselves safe from covid, baked into those structures is an inequity.”

Serulneck said it’s been frustratin­g to watch people take rapid tests so they can go to parties or travel for the holidays.

“Some people who need rapid testing to work can’t afford it,” she said. “It’s not fair. The majority of people are in my position.”

As infections climb and the country faces what health experts say will be a dark winter due to the uncontroll­ed spread of the virus, the demand for testing becomes greater. The U.S. has had more than 12 million reported cases and more than 256,000 deaths from the coronaviru­s since the start of the pandemic.

Social worker Chelsea Collins said she had to pay $150 for a test at a drugstore after she lost her insurance because of the pandemic. After her husband, a union painter, learned he may have been exposed to covid-19 this month, she was faced with finding a way to get tested again.

After visiting a free drive-thru testing site at 5:30 a.m. Saturday in Scranton, Pa., and waiting almost two hours for a test, the 32-year-old Collins said she considers herself lucky. But she thought about those people without the means to get to a testing site not served by public transit.

“I feel for a lot of people with families, at the holidays, and having to shell out $150 because they’re exposed,” Collins said.

Dan Fulwiler, president and CEO of Esperanza Health Centers in Chicago, said costly rapid-testing centers won’t help the communitie­s that his nonprofit serves. About 70% of the center’s clients live in poverty, according to his estimate.

Fulwiler laments the lack of a national testing strategy, which has led to the proliferat­ion of pop-up clinics. Daily demand for testing also has risen at Esperanza — the Spanish word for hope — from up to 150 in the summer to 400 now.

“I’m less worried about predatory pricing than I am concerned about access,” Fulwiler said. “Our clients will walk a mile to get a test for free rather than pay $15 here. A $150 test won’t be an option, and even at $30, they’ll think hard about it.”

It’s not just the cost and access that are raising questions about rapid tests.

Rapid-testing sites could create “a lot of headaches for those of us who are trying to understand surveillan­ce data,” said Jaline Gerardin, an epidemiolo­gist and infectious disease monitor who helps compile weekly forecasts of pandemic trends for the Illinois Department of Public Health.

Officials already struggle to interpret reams of data from different tests that can produce different results, said Gerardin, an assistant professor at Northweste­rn University’s Feinberg School of Medicine. New sites may not report ethnicity, outbreaks and income levels necessary to monitor a pandemic that already disproport­ionately affects Hispanics and Blacks, she said.

Gerardin said there are three goals of testing: Individual­s want to know if they’re infected; health and government officials want to understand trends and make policy decisions based on those trends; and test results provide a way to measure mitigation efforts such as quarantine­s and self-isolation.

Rapid testing may help with mitigation, she said.

“People who are getting tested less tend to be the same who are disadvanta­ged,” she said. “I don’t really see how an expensive testing option helps a testing infrastruc­ture that is thin and underresou­rced.”

The sites haven’t had a discernibl­e effect in New York City thanks to aggressive testing strategies by Gov. Andrew Cuomo and Mayor Bill de Blasio, said Maxine Golub, spokespers­on for The Institute for Family Health, which serves underserve­d communitie­s in the New York metropolit­an area.

The institute partners with government to set up regular testing sites in areas of need, such as Harlem or parts of the Bronx, Golub said.

But many people don’t have those options.

Korri Williams, a public-school teacher in Virginia, is considerin­g whether to get a rapid test to give her peace of mind to visit her 78-yearold mother after finding out that co-workers tested positive.

There are limited options for rapid testing in her Williamsbu­rg area, and without symptoms, she worries a test won’t be covered by her insurance.

“All of it comes down to economics in the pocketbook at the end of the day,” she said. “It’s not that I can’t purchase the test. But you know, sometimes you don’t have that extra $100 to go out and get a rapid test.”

It’s an equity issue, Williams said.

“I’m blessed to have a job … but I do feel like it’s one of those things that is afforded to those who have means,” she added.

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