Marysville Appeal-Democrat

Gov. Gavin Newsom said he ‘owns’ coronaviru­s testing lapses, announces task force

- Los Angeles Times (TNS)

SACRAMENTO, Calif. – Gov. Gavin Newsom said California will significan­tly increase COVID-19 testing capabiliti­es, adding that he “owns” testing lapses in the state that have made it difficult to track the deadly virus. In a Saturday news conference, Newsom announced a task force that he said will work toward a fivefold increase in daily testing in the state by identifyin­g supply shortages and adding testing locations.

The announceme­nt comes as California continues to see dramatic increases in people hospitaliz­ed with the virus, with 2,300 patients in the state. Another 3,267 people hospitaliz­ed are suspected of having COVID-19, but are awaiting testing results.

Overnight, the number of coronaviru­s patients in California’s intensive care unit beds rose nearly 11% to 1,008 people.

In all, Newsom said 126,700 people have been tested in California, a state of nearly 40 million people. Of those who have been tested, 13,000 are awaiting results.

“The testing space has been a challengin­g one for us and I own that,” Newsom said. “And I have a responsibi­lity as your governor to do better and do more testing in the state of California.”

Public health experts have said widespread testing is crucial to the state’s efforts to accurately assess how many people are infected and where the virus is spreading. However, testing has lagged across the country. For those who have been able to be tested, backlogs in laboratori­es have led to delays in results, which Newsom said has been equally frustratin­g.

Newsom announced Saturday that he formed a task force of private and public leaders and said he is confident the group will upend testing challenges in the state.

“We are now in a position where I can confidentl­y say it’s a new day,” Newsom said.

Newsom said the state is partnering with universiti­es, hospitals, labs and testing companies to increase testing locations across the state, reduce backlogs and ensure there is more accurate and timely data on the number of COVID-19 cases.

The newly created task force will be led by Paul Markovich, president and CEO of Blue Shield of California, and Dr. Charity Dean, assistant director of the state Public Health Department.

State officials have been working feverishly to add more hospital and intensive care unit beds to handle the expected surge in coronaviru­s patients. The state’s modeling suggests California will need 50,000 new hospital beds by mid-may. To meet that demand, the state is asking for recently retired medical providers, those with licenses from other states and medical school students to join the newly created California Health Corps.

Newsom said Saturday that a “staggering number of individual­s” – 79,000 people – have signed up through the state’s health corps website.

The state is also launching a website, covid19sup­plies.ca.gov, to allow individual­s and companies to donate, sell and offer to manufactur­e essential medical supplies, such as N95 masks and testing materials. Supply shortages have been blamed for inadequate testing in the state, while a lack of masks, gloves and gowns has left critical healthcare workers unprotecte­d against the virus.

In addition, Newsom said he hoped that the state-managed website would help combat rampant fraud. On Friday, Kaiser Permanente said it is cooperatin­g with a federal fraud investigat­ion involving a much-publicized deal for 39 million N95 masks that never materializ­ed. Newsom said the state is working with the FBI on a number of fraud allegation­s involving medical supplies.

“People are taking advantage of all of us at this moment, and saying they’re going to deliver something quite literally that they’re not capable of delivering or never intended to deliver,” Newsom said.

The state’s new task force is gathering data to better understand the supply chain for testing materials, said Markovich of Blue Shield. What they do know, he said, is that supplies are scarce.

“There are multiple states and countries that are demanding the same materials at the same time,” Markovich said.

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