Baltimore Sun

New testing market opens up

Firms jumping at chance to assist employers attempting to fend off work outbreaks

- By Natasha Singer

Verily Life Sciences scrambled to introduce a free coronaviru­s screening site for the public and set up testing locations in March after President Donald Trump made an off-the-cuff announceme­nt about the program. After a rocky start, it has since helped more than 220,000 people get tested in 13 states.

Now the company has its sights on employers. It is introducin­g a health screening and analytics service for businesses trying to safely reopen during the pandemic.

The service, announced Thursday, will offer COVID-19 diagnostic testing for employees and clear them to return to the workplace based on test results and other health data. It will also make recommenda­tions to employers on how often workers should be retested based on the prevalence of the virus in their workforce and the local community.

“Employers are really focusing on how to ensure that they are not the source of another outbreak,” said Dr. Vivian Lee, president of health platforms at Verily, a unit of Google’s parent company, Alphabet.

With its new service, Verily is joining numerous tech giants and startups rushing to help business across the country as they grapple with how to safely reopen the workplace. Microsoft and the large insurer UnitedHeal­th Group recently collaborat­ed on a free symptom-checking app that helps pinpoint workers at obvious risk for the virus and directs them to testing resources.

Kogniz, an artificial intelligen­ce startup, is marketing thermal camera systems as coronaviru­s fever-screening and “social distancing enforcemen­t” tools for the workplace. And Jvion, another AI startup, is marketing an “employer recovery package” to predict the risk of employee exposure to the virus and likelihood of developing it.

There is such a glut of new coronaviru­s risk-reduction products that manyemploy­ers are scrambling to assess them all.

To address the fragmented market, Verily and other health companies are introducin­g more comprehens­ive healthscre­ening programs for employers, complete with COVID-19 lab tests and health counseling for employees who test positive.

The new services are also trying to mitigate a pressing problem for employers: perhaps as many as one-quarter or more of people who have the virus do not experience symptoms like fevers and coughs. That means symptom-checking apps and fever-scanning cameras could clear employees who have the virus to return to the workplace, where they might inadverten­tly infect their colleagues.

Color, a Bay Area health technology company whose labs are processing COVID-19 tests for the city of San Francisco, this week reported that, among a group of 30,000 people it tested for the virus, the majority of those who tested positive had mild or no symptoms.

Many medical centers, nursing homes and other high-risk facilities for essential workers have adopted such employeete­sting programs. Color’s program for businesses that are reopening involves testing employees for the virus at least once before they return to the workplace and then testing asymptomat­ic employees again at regular intervals.

“There was no infrastruc­ture in place for businesses to test asymptomat­ic persons,” said Dr. Sekar Kathiresan, chief executive of Verve Therapeuti­cs, a biotech company in Cambridge, Massachuse­tts, that began using Color’s program in May in a pilot test with 11 other local biotech firms.

In 704 tests over the first month, he said, none of the employees had positive results.

 ?? VERILY ?? Verily, a sister company of Google, has a COVID-19 testing site at the Santa Clara County Fairground­s in San Jose, California.
VERILY Verily, a sister company of Google, has a COVID-19 testing site at the Santa Clara County Fairground­s in San Jose, California.

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