Oroville Mercury-Register

California inspectors find lab ‘deficienci­es’

- By Don Thompson

SACRAMENTO >> Inspectors found “significan­t deficienci­es” at California’s new coronaviru­s testing laboratory, problems that state officials on Monday partly blamed on the rapid rampup they required from the lab’s private operator under terms of a $1.4 billion contract.

A fraction of 1% of the more than 1.5 million tests processed at the Valencia Branch Laboratory had problems, the state said in a preliminar­y report, but Health and Human Services Secretary Dr. Mark Ghaly said “one incorrect test result is one too many.”

The $25 million lab that opened in October north of Los Angeles was unable to test about 250 samples (0.017%) due to lab errors, the state said. It issued corrected reports for about 60 (0.0039%) samples.

“California takes these findings seriously” and continues working with the contractor “to ensure California­ns have the accurate, timely, high- quality test results,” Ghaly said in a statement.

Massachuse­tts- based diagnostic­s company PerkinElme­r, which operates the lab as part of the agreement signed with the state last fall, said it believes “the deficienci­es ... have long since been resolved.”

The California Department of Public Health, which regulates laboratori­es, said the findings came from its initial routine inspection in early December. The company said it appeared some of the informatio­n it provided since then had not been included in that inspection report.

But the department said earlier this month that it also is investigat­ing whistleblo­wer allegation­s of incompeten­ce and mismanagem­ent, including reports of workers sleeping on the job.

Records obtained by CBS13 TV in Sacramento alleged problems including swapped samples, inconclusi­ve tests caused by contaminat­ion, and inaccurate results sent to patients. The health department acknowledg­ed then that at least “38 samples were reported incorrectl­y” because of mix-ups in samples, but said patients were promptly notified.

The station said documents showed some employees handling patient specimens were unlicensed and inadequate­ly trained. State officials said then that it had identified “a handful of individual­s” who were retrained or moved to assignment­s that fit their credential­s.

The reports have “unfortunat­ely caused confusion about laboratory practices ... and sown concern about the reliabilit­y of testing,” the company said in a statement. “That concern is misplaced.”

The company learned about the findings from the inspection last week and has until next Monday to formally say how it has or will corrected them. Ghaly said the company and state released the initial summary “in the interest of transparen­cy” rather than wait until the full report is final in mid-March.

The state pushed for the rapid opening and rampup of the laboratory at a time when it was often difficult to get tests, which were sometimes delayed until the results were relatively useless because they came too late.

“The deficienci­es identified by Laboratory Field Services, although they are taken very seriously, do reflect that we establishe­d the laboratory on an accelerate­d timeframe, and we knew that there might be growing pains that would require work and process improvemen­ts,” Ghaly said.

State officials still are counting on rapid testing results to help restore some normalcy amid quickly falling virus cases statewide. The lab gets samples from more than 1,500 collection sites to aid schools, churches, clinics, workplaces, and community-based organizati­ons.

It has 600 employees and the capacity for 100,000 tests per day, the company said. The state initially expected the lab to reach its full capacity of 150,000 tests a day by March.

However, testing volume is down statewide as California’s worst coronaviru­s surge eases, state health department spokeswoma­n Kate Folmar said. The collection sites are expected to feed the Valencia lab 502,000 specimens each week, or about 72,000 tests per day.

“We uphold the highest quality and safety standards across all of our operations, and we have already addressed the issues that emerged in the early days since the Valencia testing site was establishe­d, despite just receiving the formal report from the December inspection,” Prahlad Singh, the company’s president and chief executive officer, said in a statement.

The lab is seeking speedy accreditat ion through the independen­t College of American Pathologis­ts, the company said, “so that California­ns have no doubt about the quality of the services at the laboratory.”

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 ?? MARCIO JOSE SANCHEZ — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? Inspectors found “significan­t deficienci­es” at California’s new billion-dollar vaccine testing laboratory, problems that state officials on Monday blamed on the rapid ramp-up that they had required from the lab’s private operator.
MARCIO JOSE SANCHEZ — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE Inspectors found “significan­t deficienci­es” at California’s new billion-dollar vaccine testing laboratory, problems that state officials on Monday blamed on the rapid ramp-up that they had required from the lab’s private operator.

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