East Bay Times

Verily’s testing program is halted

Bay Area cities say sites didn’t serve groups who needed it the most

- By Jenny Gold and Rachana Pradhan

OAKLAND >> Amid fanfare in March, California officials celebrated the launch of a multimilli­on- dollar contract with Verily — Google’s health-focused sister company — that they said would vastly expand COVID testing among the state’s impoverish­ed and underserve­d communitie­s.

But seven months later, San Francisco and Alameda counties — two of the state’s most populous — have severed ties with the company’s testing sites amid concerns about patients’ data privacy and complaints that funding intended to boost testing in low-income Black and Latino neighborho­ods instead was benefiting higher-income residents in other communitie­s.

San Francisco and Alameda are among at least 28 counties, including Los Angeles, where California has paid Verily to boost testing capacity through contracts collective­ly worth $55 million, according to a spokespers­on for the California Governor’s Office of Emergency Services. About half of them have received COVID tests through six mobile units that travel among rural areas.

Gov. Gavin Newsom has heralded the investment as a game changer in addressing persistent inequities in access to COVID testing across the state that tend to fall along lines of eth

nicity and income. The goal, he said in April, touting six new Verily testing sites, was to “make sure we’re truly testing California broadly defined, not just parts of California and those that somehow have the privilege of getting ahead of the line.”

Yet the roadblocks for getting underrepre­sented population­s to use the program soon became apparent to Alameda County officials. In a June letter to California Secretar y of Health Mark Ghaly, Oakland Mayor Libby Schaaf and other members of the county’s COVID-19 Racial Disparitie­s Task Force raised numerous concerns about the Verily protocols.

Among their complaints: People signing up for a test through Verily had to do so online, using an existing or newly created Gmail account; the sign-ups were offered only in English or Spanish; and participan­ts were asked to provide sensitive personal informatio­n, including their home address and whether they were managing chronic health conditions such as diabetes, obesity or congestive heart failure, which could expose their data to third-party use.

“It is critical in this crisis that we continue to build trust between government and healthcare providers and vulnerable communitie­s,” the task force members wrote.

Verily had two sites in Alameda County, and one was shuttered by May. The second, located at an Oakland church, closed in August and is set to reopen using a different testing vendor. Alameda County testing director Dr. Jocelyn Freeman Garrick said that while the Verily sites helped the county reach testing goals in terms of raw numbers, they were phased out because of long wait times of a week or more for results, and because the tests were not reaching the residents in greatest need.

Verily does not manufactur­e the COVID tests used

at its California sites. It contracts with major corporatio­ns such as Quest Diagnostic­s and Thermo Fisher Scientific to provide the test kits and perform the lab work. What Verily provides is a digital platform where people are screened for symptoms, schedule testing appointmen­ts at participat­ing sites and check back for test results.

Dr. Noha Aboelata is CEO of Roots Community Health Center, an East Oakland clinic that serves mostly African Americans and is one of the original Verily sites in Oakland. Her experience with Verily is best described as a tale of two lines.

In May, Aboelata worked with Verily to establish a walk-up site at her clinic, rather than the drive-thru model the company typically uses. There would be two lines: one for people who scheduled their appointmen­ts through Verily’s online portal; and a second for people who had not preregiste­red with Verily. Roots would staff both lines, and Verily would supply test kits and personal protective equipment including masks, which were “like gold” at the time, Aboelata said.

Problems emerged almost immediatel­y, she said. People were suspicious of the requiremen­t that they sign up with a Gmail account, and the request for personal informatio­n, such as health status and risk factors. “You don’t necessaril­y want to share that with Google,” Aboelata said.

Then there was the language in the privacy policy that allows for sharing data with third parties. “That always is going to raise suspicion and concern in our community,” she said.

The people who ended up in the Verily-registered line, she said, tended to be white and to come from wealthier ZIP codes outside East Oakland. And because Verily never changed the website language describing Roots as a drive-thru site, many were angry at having to walk up.

“We had people coming from all over the Bay Area who were frustrated

that they had to park in Oakland, where they had probably never been and didn’t seem to want to be,” she said. “They were creating quite a scene, and some were saying, ‘I want to talk to the manager.’” She had to ask a few people to leave. “One of them was saying, ‘ This is so Oakland, and I hope you all get the virus.’ It was pretty awful.”

The Roots line for clients who did not register through Verily, on the other hand, was made up mostly of people of color from the community who long had come to the clinic for medical care, she said.

When Aboelata looked at the data, the disparitie­s were obvious: 12.9% of people tested in the non-Verily line were positive for COVID-19, while just 1.5% of people tested in the Verilyregi­stered line were positive. For Aboelata, it was clear that the two lines were testing two entirely different population­s.

After just six days of testing, Aboelata asked Verily to leave.

“From where we sit, this is an old story,” she said. “Corporatio­ns that are not really invested in the community come helicopter­ing in, bearing gifts, but what they’re taking away is much more valuable.” That thing of value, Aboelata believes, is the data Verily requests from everyone who signs up for a test.

In San Francisco, Verily mobile testing clinics have also been sidelined. County officials declined to provide an explanatio­n. However, multiple people with knowledge of the testing efforts said the Verily registrati­on process proved chaotic for homeless people and others in the Tenderloin district, one of the city’s poorest neighborho­ods.

Kenneth Kim, clinical director of Glide, an outreach center that helped run the Tenderloin site, said many homeless residents coming in for testing had Gmail accounts, as Verily required, but could not remember their passwords. When staffers at the testing site tried to help them retrieve their passwords, they found that Google’s two

factor authentica­tion process required users to have the same phone number as when they signed up, which few of the homeless participan­ts did.

Dr. Jonathan Fuchs, who leads San Francisco County’s testing strategy at the Department of Public Health, confirmed that the partnershi­p with Verily was “currently on hold.” He declined to provide further details.

In response to questions, Verily spokespers­on Kathleen Parkes said the program requires users to register with Gmail accounts because Google’s authentica­tion procedures safeguard sensitive data and protect “against unknown individual­s sending or receiving informatio­n with serious consequenc­es for health or well-being.” Conversati­ons with San Francisco and Alameda remain “active,” Parkes said. The company did not respond to specific questions about the testing disparitie­s cited by community leaders.

California’s Verily contracts are in place through Nov. 30.

Participan­ts in the Verily initiative sign an authorizat­ion form that says their informatio­n can be shared with multiple third parties involved in the testing program, including unnamed contractor­s and state and federal health authoritie­s.

“While the form tells you that Verily may share data with ‘entities that assist with the testing program,’ it doesn’t say who those entities are. If one of those unnamed and unknown entities violates your privacy by misusing your data, you have no way to know and no way to hold them accountabl­e,” said Lee Tien, senior staff attorney for the Electronic Frontier Foundation, a nonprofit that advocates for digital privacy.

The policy states Verily will not use the data collected for its own research or meld it with other Google products without the user’s permission. But it notes participan­ts may be invited to share their data for such research, and the testing portal prominentl­y features links inviting participan­ts to sign up for

other Verily research.

In California, as of Oct. 8, the Verily sites had processed an average of 1,583 patient samples per day over the prior seven days, according to the California Department of Public Health. Verily, the state health department and Alameda County all declined requests to provide race and ethnicity data by testing site.

Dr. Kim Rhoads, a UCSF profe ssor a nd former colorectal surgeon who leads a COVID testing project for Black communitie­s, said Aboelata’s experience with Verily is emblematic of widespread racial disparitie­s in the testing and treatment of COVID-19. “We can’t keep talking about the consequenc­es being unintended,” Rhoads said. “We are six months into this pandemic and anyone who is surprised by the repetitive findings of inequity in testing, the spread of virus and COVID-19 mortality just isn’t paying attention.”

In an interview, Ghaly, California’s health secretary, said he believed the state’s partnershi­ps with Verily and other companies continue to be a national model for addressing problems with testing disparitie­s, including setting up venues for minority and rural population­s. For example, in counties in northern parts of the state, sometimes the only regular testing available was through mobile testing set up under the program, he said.

“I think there’s lots of success and lots of lessons learned and we continue to apply them,” Ghaly said. “Until the entire effort is completed, I always look at where we are as part success and part opportunit­y to keep learning.”

In a September response to the Oakland COVID-19 dispar ities ta sk force, Ghaly outlined several actions the state had taken or would take in response to the concerns, including having Verily update its platform to include additional languages and work with testing vendors on alternativ­e methods for data collection to address privacy concerns.

“Some of the things we learned specifical­ly in our experience in Alameda and other parts of the Bay Area is language matters,” Ghaly told KHN.

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