San Antonio Express-News

Firms cite cost as one barrier to virus tests

- By Noam Scheiber

A surge of COVID-19 cases this fall has brought reports of new challenges in getting coronaviru­s tests. But for employers, testing availabili­ty and turnaround times do not appear to be the main obstacles.

A survey by Arizona State University and the World Economic Forum, with funding from the Rockefelle­r Foundation, has found that companies most frequently cited cost and complexity as the biggest deterrents to testing their workers.

The findings, based on responses from 1,141 facilities at over 1,100 companies worldwide from September through late October, are consistent with earlier reports suggesting that many employers have been able to obtain testing relatively quickly if they absorb the expense. In many cases, however, employers have indicated that they feel the benefits do not outweigh the costs.

Overall, 17 percent of the facilities surveyed worldwide said they were testing workers. At least half those facilities were doing so even for workers without symptoms, and roughly half were testing workers at least once a week.

At facilities that were not testing, only 15 percent said availabili

ty was an issue, while 28 percent cited cost, 22 percent cited complexity and 16 percent said it would take too long to receive the results. (Those surveyed could select more than one reason.) The numbers for the U.S., where more than 700 of the facilities were located, were similar to the overall results.

Mara Aspinall, a professor at Arizona State’s College of Health Solutions who helped oversee the study, said the results indicated companies were figuring out how to get testing done if it was essen

tial. For the others, she said, there was simply “a lot of confusion and uncertaint­y as to how tests work” in the absence of a national testing strategy. And the potential expense loomed large as well.

Aspinall, who is also an adviser to the Rockefelle­r Foundation, said she thought workplace testing would become far more widespread next year as employers seek to bring more people back.

Dr. Raj Behal, chief quality officer of One Medical, which provides primary health care services to large employers such as Google, agreed that the lack of cheap tests had played a major role in limiting uptake.

“In our experience, companies that need to bring their employees in because they are essential or critical workers are regularly screening and testing employees for COVID,” said Behal, whose company has helped clients arrange testing and was not involved in the survey. “In general, though, cost may be the single most important barrier to widespread testing in the U.S.”

PCR tests, which are generally considered the most accurate but typically require laboratory processing, cost roughly $100 in the U.S. Medicare typically covers COVID-19 tests, but many private insurance plans do not.

A spokespers­on for One Medical said the average turnaround time for the tests was two to three days in most markets.

The survey found that companies with 25 or fewer workers were least likely to test, with only 8 percent doing so. About 40 percent of companies with 1,001 to 5,000 workers were testing, as were nearly 60 percent of companies with over 5,000 workers.

Among the biggest companies that didn’t test, cost was not a commonly cited obstacle. Those companies were much more likely to be discourage­d by the complexity of testing their large workforces, which one-third cited.

Biotechnol­ogy and technology companies were among the most likely to test workers, with 37 percent and 29 percent doing so, even as they were also among the most likely to require employees to work remotely.

Manufactur­ing was also among the industries where testing was relatively common, with 20 percent of the facilities saying they did so. By contrast, only 10 percent of profession­al services firms, such as accounting and law practices, said they were testing. And sectors in which rank-and-file workers tend to be poorly paid and can’t work from home, had even lower rates.

Zack Cooper, an economist at the Yale School of Public Health who has advised the Rockefelle­r Foundation, said he had some concern that a survey of this kind could be biased because companies that did not respond might differ from companies that did so. But he said that in general he was not surprised by the results. Cooper had no role in the survey.

There was one area where U.S.based facilities diverged significan­tly from those elsewhere: Only 37 percent carried out contact tracing for workers testing positive, versus more than half of facilities abroad.

 ?? New York Times file photo ?? A survey of companies found that those with 25 or fewer workers were least likely to test, with only 8 percent doing so.
New York Times file photo A survey of companies found that those with 25 or fewer workers were least likely to test, with only 8 percent doing so.

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