Miami Herald (Sunday)

Local health official: State to cut off contact tracing

The director of the Palm Beach County health department said Florida will stop providing funds for contact tracing at the end of November.

- BY KIRBY WILSON, ROMY ELLENBOGEN AND MEGAN REEVES Tampa Bay Times

The director of the Palm Beach County health department made a startling public statement Tuesday: After Nov. 30, Florida will stop funding local efforts to trace new coronaviru­s infections.

“We want to keep the contact tracing effective. We want to maintain those people that we have,” Alina Alonso said at a local county commission meeting. “Definitely a big concern for the entire state.”

Contact tracing is a timeintens­ive investigat­ive process used to get in touch with people who have come into contact with someone who has tested positive for COVID-19. It’s been held up by Florida Surgeon General Scott Rivkees as “a way that we actually stop the

cycle of transmissi­on.”

But Tuesday’s pronouncem­ent from Alonso, the top health official in Florida’s third-largest county, raised questions about the future of the state’s contact tracing program — questions the state was not willing to fully answer.

When asked whether the state would keep funding local contact tracing efforts after Nov. 30, a spokesman for the Florida Department of Emergency Management said officials will “work with” county health department­s to make sure contact tracing efforts are funded. The spokesman, Jason Mahon, noted that local health funding comes from state, county and federal programs.

The Palm Beach County department of health did not immediatel­y respond to an email and phone call asking for comment.

Since then, Florida stopped mandating and paying for the testing of staff at nursing homes and assisted living facilities. Gov. Ron DeSantis has allowed most businesses — including bars — to reopen fully, with no restrictio­ns. And last week, the state eased restrictio­ns on people visiting long-term care facilities.

Few of the state’s policies have forbidden local government­s or individual businesses from taking precaution­s. Many businesses across the state are still limiting indoor service; the federal government has started to pay for the testing of nursing home staff. County health department­s will continue to perform contact tracing, Mahon said.

But most all of the state’s recent actions have transferre­d responsibi­lity for preventing outbreaks from state government officials to localities and individual­s.

When DeSantis announced reopening, he pointed to improving indicators — fewer cases, hospitaliz­ations and lower positivity rates. But in the past week, Florida has seen cases and hospitaliz­ations rise, a nationwide pattern pointing to another possible surge.

That means now isn’t the time to pull back on contact tracing efforts, said Dr. Mary Jo Trepka, the chair of Florida Internatio­nal University’s Department of Epidemiolo­gy.

Trepka said with Florida open and little social distancing in place, contact tracing is one of the few strategies left to control the virus, along with testing and asking people to do their part.

“If you start cutting that program now it’s going to be very hard to restart again, and it is a really important part of controllin­g COVID,” Trepka said.

In late May, the state began to contract its tracing efforts out to a company, Maximus, which said in an email that it currently has 1,100 people working to trace new infections. To date, the state has paid that firm between $65 million and $70 million, a Maximus spokeswoma­n said.

Hundreds of Florida’s contact tracers have also come from medical schools, including the University of Florida. Representa­tives from the Department of Health started recruiting students in the spring. But in mid-July, they stopped calling, said Dr. Michael Lauzardo, director of UF’s in-house contact tracing program. He isn’t sure why. Specifics of the agreement with Maximus have been “obscured” by the state, Lauzardo added. Contact tracing “became a very nebulous kind of process” when the company came in.

Potential funding cuts would further weaken local health department­s’ efforts, Lauzardo said. Municipali­ties would have to draw from their own budgets to continue pursuing this vital public health work, he said. The threat of a funding shortfall is all the greater as government­s run out of the money they got through the federal Coronaviru­s Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act, passed in March.

Even with state funding, contact tracing efforts have fallen short in Florida all along, Lauzardo said — in the face of evidence that the practice helps slow the spread of disease.

“We are in an age where people don’t listen to experts and where policy is divorced from expertise,” he said. “When you don’t look at the data and the science, there’s a price to pay.”

Lauzardo called contact tracing “a basic public health function,” comparing it to access to clean drinking water. Pushing its financial burden onto localities is as absurd as asking individual neighborho­ods to purify their own water so the city or county doesn’t have to, he said.

“There is no debate among any public health experts anywhere that contact tracing is not worth doing,” he said. “There’s a huge amount of value in it and it’s not something to be given up on. That’s a fatalistic and cowardly way to look at this.”

Hiring and training contact tracers takes weeks, Trepka said. During Florida’s summer surge, casework swamped the department of health as they rushed to get contact tracers in place.

A survey from NPR and Johns Hopkins University estimates Florida needs about 8,761 contact tracers but has 4,400 working.

The state doesn’t readily report the size of its contact tracing workforce, how many cases it has attempted to reach and how many were reached successful­ly. When asked questions about these figures, Mahon did not respond.

 ?? Elenabs/Getty ?? Contact tracing is not new in the health and epidemiolo­gy world. It is a standard practice in public health when it comes to controllin­g highly communicab­le diseases such as COVID-19.
Elenabs/Getty Contact tracing is not new in the health and epidemiolo­gy world. It is a standard practice in public health when it comes to controllin­g highly communicab­le diseases such as COVID-19.

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