Marysville Appeal-Democrat

COVID test crunch means hours-long waits

- Bloombwerg News (TNS)

You can bring wine to Thanksgivi­ng, bring sweet potatoes, bring congealed salad if you must. But you can’t bring COVID-19, and that’s causing hours-long lines at U.S. testing centers, triggering desperatio­n among people yet to be cleared for the holiday meal.

They’re waiting outside even as health officials warn that a negative result is hardly a guarantee of safety – and that they could be boxing out those who have symptoms or were exposed to the virus. The safest course of action is to stay home. Still, many people are hanging their plans to give thanks Thursday on a test.

Brandon Mintz, a 25-yearold data analyst in Buffalo, New York, found himself in a bind last week when his parents in nearby Binghamton told him he needed a screening for the family get-together. No available testing slots would give him results in time. He postponed the trip initially, then his father found appointmen­ts in Binghamton, where Mintz is now planning on a rapid test.

“I just want to be able to be home and be around them without that even being a concern,” said Mintz, who recently had a virus scare in his office. With infections rising in the area, “I think a lot of people are overwhelme­d and have the same ideas.”

The U.S., where about 258,000 have died from the coronaviru­s, has struggled to implement a unified and successful approach to fighting the disease. President Donald Trump made a point of flouting his own administra­tion’s safety recommenda­tions, and governors have imposed a patchwork of precaution­s on an exhausted population. Amid the disarray, some Americans plan large celebratio­ns as a matter of political defiance. Many others are just muddling through as safely as they can.

In downtown Brooklyn on Sunday, about 120 people were already in line at an urgent care chain by around 10 a.m. They faced a seven-hour wait — so long the clinic cut off the line. Undeterred, Lauren Brown, a 34-year-old who planned to drive to Virginia this week to get together with her parents and sister, came back again the next day, when she waited about an hour-and-a-half alongside other Thanksgivi­ng testseeker­s.

“I did it more for my mom, although I think even with the negative test she’ll still be worried,” Brown said. She added that the long lines seemed at odds with TV commercial­s that tell locals to get screened.

“There’s a disconnect between what they’re encouragin­g and what’s available,” she said.

Appointmen­ts were booked solid on Monday morning at 15toknow, a pop-up tester in the parking lot of Willow Grove Park Mall, 30 miles north of Philadelph­ia.

Keith Mccarroll, 55, a sales representa­tive from Warminster, Pennsylvan­ia, said his son had COVID and so the whole family was being tested. He had been hoping for $75, 15-minute tests for him, his wife and daughter, but they were sold out until Saturday.

The Mccarrolls will get the results of their $99 PCR tests on Tuesday night.

Long lines have proved an opportunit­y for independen­t contractor­s with Taskrabbit who find line-standing gigs for things like Black Friday sales are often in high demand during the holiday season. This year, some have stood in for people seeking COVID-19 tests, Rebecca Weill, a company spokespers­on, said by email. She noted that workers know what the job is ahead of time and can choose to say no if they’re uncomforta­ble.

Though Thanksgivi­ng is the immediate reason for the testing crunch, it also reflects record levels of infections. The U.S. reported more than 170,000 new cases each day over the past week, on average. It performed about 1.7 million tests daily over that period, according to The COVID Tracking Project.

Laboratori­es, meanwhile, continue to grapple with shortages of critical testing supplies that have hampered their capacity since the pandemic’s early months.

In the face of a “major upsurge in demand,” Health Commission­er Dave Chokshi said at a Monday briefing that New York City is bringing in mobile testing units and distributi­ng selfcollec­tion kits to those in lines.

Testing capacity is also being added in neighborin­g New Jersey. Pop-up locations at schools and other public buildings are planned through year-end to handle a crush of people as the December holidays approach, Governor Phil Murphy said at a Monday news conference.

“It gets tougher before it gets better,” Murphy said.

“You’ve got supply-chain issues that are real.”

Health experts for months have warned that COVID-19 screenings are no panacea. Tests capture only a moment in time, may miss emerging infections and can produce false negatives, so they must be combined with maskwearin­g, social distancing and hand-washing.

“Testing does not replace basic health measures,” said Patrick Godbey, president of the College of American Pathologis­ts. “You cannot test yourself out of a pandemic.”

Those who celebrate Thanksgivi­ng with others face risks while traveling and at the event itself, where people will be eating and thus not wearing a mask, said Robin Patel, an infectious disease specialist at Minnesota’s Mayo Clinic.

“It’s so hard, because it’s such an American tradition to get together for the holidays,” she said. “But putting others at risk – it’s just not worth it, frankly.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States