Las Vegas Review-Journal

Nevada lost coronaviru­s contact tracers as a contract expired.

Official: Workforce still able to keep up

- By Michael Scott Davidson

Nevada lost about 70 COVID-19 contact tracers this week to an expired contract, adding to the burden on local health authoritie­s to alert people likely exposed to the novel coronaviru­s.

Hundreds of contact tracers remain on the job in Nevada despite the reduction. With new recommenda­tions narrowing their duties, the contact tracing workforce remains adequate despite current high levels of COVID-19 spread, a top state health official said Wednesday.

“The local health department­s feel confident that they’ll be able to maintain services,” Nevada Department of Health and Human Services deputy administra­tor

Julia Peek said in a briefing call for reporters. “Most of the staffing will remain in place.”

Contact tracing is a crucial part of the public health response to an epidemic of an infectious disease like COVID-19. Workers are responsibl­e for alerting the close contacts of an infected person that they may have been exposed and should self-quarantine.

As of this week, contact tracing had led to more than 45,000 new cases being identified in Nevada, Peek said. That is about one-fifth of known cases in the state.

This week the state is losing contact tracers working through the profession­al services firm Deloitte. Nevada signed a

$28.4 million contract with the company in June, paid with federal CARES Act relief funds.

Deloitte added 250 workers to the state’s contact tracer ranks.

The company also establishe­d an automated text messaging system to help the effort.

Deloitte’s workers made more than 260,000 calls to close contacts, Peek said. Their efforts focused on Clark and Washoe counties and the Quad-county region in western Nevada.

This month, the state made new recommenda­tions that contact tracers more narrowly focus their efforts to high-risk population­s. As a result, fewer than 80 workers from Deloitte were working when the state’s contract with the company expired Wednesday.

Peek said hundreds of full-time and part-time contact tracers remain on the job, many of whom are students in the Nevada System of Higher Education. The state also is working with local health authoritie­s to establish a new automated text messaging system.

Washoe County Health District officer Kevin Dick said his agency took over contact tracing from the state on Sunday. The agency has partnered with the University of Nevada, Reno, to handle the new work.

But the bulk of the workers hired through UNR are assigned to disease investigat­ion duties, including gathering the names of close contacts from infected people. Only two workers are assigned to contact tracing duties each day, he said.

This month, Southern Nevada Health District disease surveillan­ce supervisor Kimberly Hertin said it would be difficult for her agency to take on contact tracing.

“We simply don’t have enough internal staffing to help,” Hertin said.

The health district is using its own automatic notificati­on system to reach close contacts by text message and email, agency spokeswoma­n Jennifer Sizemore said Wednesday. The same system was used before the state’s contract with Deloitte was in place.

“If the Health District does not have good contact informatio­n, staff is doing their best to notify as capacity allows,” Sizemore said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States