Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Report: Early airport screening ‘ineffective’

- Julia Thompson

Early pandemic efforts to screen internatio­nal passengers for the coronaviru­s at U.S. airports were largely “ineffective,” according to a new report published in the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report journal.

In January, the CDC and U.S. Department of Homeland Security began a screening program for air passengers arriving from certain countries to reduce the importatio­n of COVID-19 cases into the U.S. A total of 766,044 passengers were screened at 15 airports around the country between Jan. 17 and Sept. 13. Only one case per 85,000 travelers screened was detected.

“The low case detection rate of this resource-intensive program highlighte­d the need for fundamenta­l change in the U.S. border health strategy,” the report said. It also notes that because transmissi­on of the coronaviru­s can happen by asymptomat­ic carriers and symptoms vary, “symptom-based screening programs are ineffective” and

The screening consisted of three steps:

U.S. Customs and Border Protection officers identified and referred travelers for screening if they had been to one of the specified countries during the previous 14 days.

Initial health screenings for those travelers were conducted that included a temperatur­e check, a questionna­ire about symptoms and virus exposure and collection of contact informatio­n.

Ill travelers or those who disclosed exposure were referred for additional assessment to on-site medical personnel or to a local health care facility.

The cost of the program was not disclosed, though at the program’s peak volume in March, approximat­ely 750 screeners, plus supporting personnel, were involved, and the CDC covered the cost of equipment, travel and housing of quarantine­d travelers.

“resource-intensive.”

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