Las Vegas Review-Journal

Clark County officials hope moving a testing site will help gather virus data on children.

COVID-19 swabbing switches to UNLV, hopes to draw kids

- By Shea Johnson

Clark County officials hope the relocation of the coronaviru­s testing site into a UNLV parking garage Wednesday will capture data from a population thus far underrepor­ted: children.

In moving the community-based testing center from The Orleans, which tested nearly 14,000 people since early May, officials said Tuesday that they are optimistic about being able to replicate its success.

“We’re hoping to reach the capacity here and the seamless process that we achieved at The Orleans,” Clark County Fire Capt. Brian O’neal said, adding that the site had escalated to administer­ing up to 1,200 tests per day during its roughly three weeks of operation.

But the new UNLV site is different. Not only will it now accept drivethrou­gh and walk-up patients, thus accommodat­ing pedestrian­s, bicyclists and motorcycli­sts, but it also will not limit the cotton-swab testing by age.

“The idea behind obtaining tests in the pediatric population is to supplement the lack of

scientific studies in how COVID affects children,” said University Medical Center Dr. Luis Medina-garcia, an infectious disease specialist. “And we want to give our local pediatrici­ans sufficient informatio­n from a public health perspectiv­e to determine whether special steps need to be taken.”

Children in the U.S. and Europe who recovered from the novel coronaviru­s have reportedly later been hospitaliz­ed with an inflammato­ry syndrome believed to be tied to the virus.

Medina-garcia said it is important to establish a data pool in this region not only for health studies but also for decision-makers so they have informatio­n they can lean on to determine when to reopen schools.

While hospitals and some doctor offices have performed tests on children, Medina-garcia said he believed the UNLV site would be the first community-based testing location for children in the Las Vegas Valley.

Although there is no age limit on who may be tested with parental consent, “we’re not going to force any child to take the test even if their parents want them to,” O’neal said.

Instead, Medina-garcia, said officials will test children if they are able to cooperate and if the individual administer­ing the swab believes it can be done safely. If not, officials may ask the parent to reschedule or have testing performed at a different venue, he said.

Walk-up testing

Officials are also trying to reach participan­ts without vehicles in order to cater to a broader population, including students, the homeless and people living nearby without transporta­tion, according to O’neal.

“Part of the reason for that is being inclusive,” Medina-garcia said. “We understand that not everybody has access to a vehicle, and we have population that uses public transporta­tion, and they should be able to have access to testing just the same.”

Widespread testing has long been seen as the key to reopening the economy, and while Clark County Commission­er Jim Gibson lauded the coordinate­d effort to expand testing throughout the county, he

noted that “it’s not lost on us that the community and our residents are responding to the call to be tested.”

New UNLV site details

Individual­s seeking to get tested, whether they have symptoms or not, must pre-register at UMCSN.COM or by phone with Clinical Pathology Laboratori­es at 702-795-4932. The Tropicana Avenue parking garage is next to the Thomas & Mack Center, and individual­s can enter through University Center Drive, where they will be directed by staffers to the location.

Patients are asked to arrive about 15 minutes before their appointmen­t time to get checked in. O’neal said those in vehicles would be instructed to keep their windows up for self-quarantine purposes and to put their ID on their dashboard.

There will be six testing stations, identical to the capacity at The Orleans, and O’neal said officials are hoping that the process, from ID verificati­on to testing, would take 10 to 15 minutes, depending on demand.

Participan­ts will be administer­ed polymerase chain reaction tests, which can determine whether someone is currently affected by the novel coronaviru­s.

There will be no out-of-pocket costs for patients. The site will be open 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. Monday through Saturday.

Clark County and University Medical Center are operating the site in partnershi­p with Clinical Pathology Laboratori­es, the Nevada National Guard, UNLV and University Police Services.

 ?? L.E. Baskow Las Vegas Review-journal @Left_eye_images ?? Signage and cones are set up Tuesday at the new UNLV Tropicana Avenue parking garage COVID-19 testing site.
L.E. Baskow Las Vegas Review-journal @Left_eye_images Signage and cones are set up Tuesday at the new UNLV Tropicana Avenue parking garage COVID-19 testing site.
 ??  ?? Nevada National Guard Pfc. Nikolas Herrera tests Lt. Col. Eric Ballew on Tuesday at the UNLV Tropicana Avenue parking garage COVID-19 testing site, which opens Wednesday.
Nevada National Guard Pfc. Nikolas Herrera tests Lt. Col. Eric Ballew on Tuesday at the UNLV Tropicana Avenue parking garage COVID-19 testing site, which opens Wednesday.

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