McDonald County Press

Washington Post (Op-Ed): A ‘Shark Tank’ For Government

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There is no safe path forward to combat the novel coronaviru­s without adequate testing. To contain covid-19 and persuade Americans to leave their homes and return to work and school, the United States will need tens of millions of diagnostic tests. Deborah Birx, the coordinato­r of the coronaviru­s task force, says there are now 1 million tests available weekly; by mid-June, there will be 2 million to 2½ million available.

That is impressive — but not nearly enough. We should squeeze every test possible out of current technologi­es, but we need tens of millions more to really get a handle on how far and wide this disease has spread. This demand will only grow as the country goes back to work and some 100,000 public schools and more than 5,000 colleges reopen, we hope, in August.

As the heads of two U.S. Senate panels responsibl­e for public health, we have been talking with experts across the government and the private sector to find anyone who believes that current technology can produce the tens of millions of tests necessary to put this virus behind us. Unfortunat­ely, we have yet to find anyone to do so.

However, those conversati­ons have pointed toward a possible solution.

We propose a competitiv­e “shark tank” — much like the reality-TV show about entreprene­urs, but this time utilizing the capacities of government itself, in coordinati­on with the private sector — to pull out all the stops and create new technologi­es designed to produce tens of millions of diagnostic tests by August. If there’s a bold idea out there that will work, we need to make sure the funding is available to get it approved and in the hands of healthcare providers quickly. We also should improve serologic tests to determine whether someone already has had the disease and has now created the necessary immunity to hopefully fight off the disease in the future.

The first place to find these technologi­es is at the National Institutes of Health, where two dozen early-stage testing concepts are under developmen­t. Some utilize CRISPR gene-editing technology. At least one allows you to use your cellphone to photograph your test swab result and send it to a doctor. Several may incorporat­e wearable technology.

The second place is the Biomedical Advanced

Research and Developmen­t Authority (BARDA), a division of the Department of Health and Human Services. BARDA has been working across government and industry to invest in multiple innovative ideas to achieve accurate, fast and easy testing capabiliti­es and build new capacity. BARDA will also play a critical role in partnering with private companies to manufactur­e and produce tests as necessary and as breakthrou­ghs are discovered.

We must invite breakthrou­gh ideas to our so-called shark tank. We must innovate. And we must use our best scientists at these two agencies and across government to do this faster than ever before.

By incorporat­ing a shark tank environmen­t in government research, we can more quickly develop the necessary technologi­es to get more tests into circulatio­n. While there is a risk of failure with any research — in science, success is not guaranteed — we also could produce the one mighty great white shark that will help us combat this disease.

Last month, Congress gave BARDA, NIH and other agencies up to $38 billion for testing, treatments and vaccines to fight this virus. We recommend spending even more to advance other research, giving money to states to buy testing equipment, improve data reporting, conduct tests and operate testing centers, and implement contact tracing to identify those who’ve come in contact with sick people so they, too, can quarantine themselves — instead of the rest of us quarantini­ng ourselves.

Specifical­ly, we propose $1 billion to launch this shark tank for testing. Funding would be provided to the NIH to work with BARDA to underwrite any innovative idea with a chance to succeed. Importantl­y, industry experts and partners would be brought in to evaluate the potential technology, its effectiven­ess and its scalabilit­y.

This is the time for both government and its industry partners to step up and pull out all the stops. American ingenuity will succeed, but like any enterprise, it needs start-up financing to help it thrive.

Sen. Roy Blunt (Mo.) is chairman of the Senate’s health appropriat­ions subcommitt­ee. Sen. Lamar Alexander (Tenn.) is chairman of the Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee.

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