Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Trump’s testing plan enters its second wave of failure

- Dana Milbank Columnist

WASHINGTON » It has been seven months since the pandemic struck, and still the Trump national testing plan is testing little more than our patience.

If we had a properly functionin­g federal government, we would have enough screening tests by now to send kids back to school in most places and to protect essential workers, residents of nursing homes, university students and workers in food processing plants and other high- risk settings. But instead of the nearly 200 million monthly tests we would need, we have under 30 million.

After the testing debacle of the spring, we now have a new and thoroughly avoidable shortage because of two fundamenta­l failures:

While pursuing the first- generation, lab- based diagnostic tests, the administra­tion, perhaps believing President Donald Trump’s claims that we’d turned the corner and wouldn’t need much testing to put out the “embers,” was slow to ramp up the rapid tests needed for asymptomat­ic screening.

Now the Trump administra­tion is blocking federal aid to states that would give them the billions they need to boost screening — because Trump thinks this a giveaway to his political opponents.

The technology exists. Efforts to expand rapid tests by manufactur­ers, states and private groups have been heroic. But a report this month funded by the Duke Margolis Center for Health Policy and the Rockefelle­r Foundation found that federal efforts do not yet amount to a national testing strategy and clear path to implement it.

On March 6, Trump visited the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and proclaimed that anybody who wants a test gets a test. That was absurd at the time. It’s still a cruel joke.

In an informal test of our testing system, I set out this month to see if I could get the kids in my household regularly tested. In theory, that would allow them to see friends and do more activities.

I checked with the pediatrici­an: No testing offered. I checked Walgreens: No testing offered to those under 18. I checked CVS: My kids didn’t qualify.

I drove themto a no- appointmen­t government- run testing site during the scheduled hours. It was closed. I drove to another site. Also closed without notice. I called a third. Closed.

I checked with a private clinic that offered the rapid test. It was closed for twoweeks — “due to COVID- 19 noted in our office building.” I called another private clinic. They could test us the next day, for $ 270 apiece— and it would take two more days to get a result.

Finally, I used LabCorp’s $ 119 home test, and that worked. But the five- day turnaround ( two days to receive it, a day to return it, two days to process) makes it useless as a screening tool.

Testing capabiliti­es vary by jurisdicti­on, but nowhere does the capacity exist to do the sort of screening that would get us to some semblance of normalcy.

“It is a little bit maddening,” Jonathan Quick, head of the Rockefelle­r Foundation’s pandemicre­sponse initiative, tells me. “We’re doing a fraction of what we need to, a growing fraction but still a fraction.”

Quick figures that, even with a vaccine, “we need to be prepared for at least another 18 months of managing by testing.” Rockefelle­r is coordinati­ng a 10- state consortium that is trying to move closer to the needed 193 million tests nationally per month. But there’s only so much that can be done without the Trump administra­tion’s support.

“Open your schools; everybody, open your schools,” Trump demanded last week on the same day he incorrectl­y declared that the virus “affects virtually nobody” under 18.

We could open the schools in all but half a dozen states, and workplaces, too, if we had adequate testing. Instead, Trump, while keeping himself safe by using rapid screening of those around him, prefers that the rest of us rely on a magical vaccine or perhaps wait to develop what he calls “herd mentality.”

Maybe this is why, when it comes to testing, his administra­tion continues to act like a rafter of turkeys.

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