Daily Press (Sunday)

Cost may be the real reason your company won’t do COVID testing

- By Kristin Toussaint

Frequent testing is crucial to curbing the spread of COVID-19, especially for those who still have to go into their physical workplaces rather than work from home. But few employers are testing their workers regularly, according to new research — and it’s not because tests are hard to come by.

The Arizona State University survey of 1,125 companies across 29 countries found that only 17% of employers reported testing workers for COVID-19. They blamed the high cost, the difficulti­es of testing and accuracy issues.

However, companies are taking some steps to lower the risk of COVID-19 transmissi­on at their workplaces, the survey says. Nearly three-quarters of the employers require masks, and close to 80% say they make masks and hand sanitizer available.

Less than 10% say they have definite plans for future viral testing.

Why aren’t companies testing their workers? According to the survey, 28% say COVID-19 tests are too costly, 22% say they’re too complicate­d to implement, and 18% say they’re concerned about the test accuracy. Another 17% say they don’t believe testing will help reduce infection. Only 15% of employers say test availabili­ty was the reason why. (Employers were allowed to give multiple responses, so there may be some overlap in answers.)

The more employees a company has, the more likely it is to test workers. Of workplaces with 25 or fewer employees, only 8% say they’re testing workers. But 41% of businesses with 100 to 1,000 employees have testing in place.

Not all countries have the same attitudes toward workplace testing. When filtering the results by continent, 48% of the employers in Asia say they’re testing their workers, as are 25% of employers in Africa. In Europe, only 16% say they’re testing their employees, and in

North America, the number drops to 14%.

The U.S. has been among the hardest hit countries during this pandemic, though cases are surging worldwide. The survey noted that there were no difference­s between how the U.S. and non-U.S. companies were handling the pandemic, except one: In the U.S., only 37% of companies contact trace their employees, while that figure jumps to 54% abroad.

The ASU survey, conducted over six weeks in September and October, was developed in collaborat­ion with the World Economic Forum, with support from the Rockefelle­r Foundation.

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SIRAWITMAR­CH/DREAMSTIME

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