Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Biden bets on rapid, at-home COVID-19 tests to curb virus

- By Matthew Perrone

WASHINGTON — President Joe Biden is betting on millions more rapid, at-home tests to help curb the latest deadly wave of the COVID-19 pandemic, which is overloadin­g hospitals and threatenin­g to shutter classrooms around the country.

But the tests have already disappeare­d from pharmacy shelves in many parts of the U.S., and manufactur­ers warn it will take them weeks to ramp up production, after scaling it back amid plummeting demand over the summer.

The latest shortage is another painful reminder that the U.S. has yet to successful­ly manage its COVID-19 testing arsenal, let alone deploy it in the type of systematic way needed to quickly crush outbreaks in schools, workplaces and communitie­s.

Experts say encouragin­g signs last spring led to false confidence about the shrinking role for tests: falling case numbers, rising vaccinatio­n rates and guidance from health officials that vaccinated people could largely skip testing. Officials recently reversed that advice as cases and deaths driven by the delta variant surged anew.

Colorado’s Mesa County is among the local government­s that have stopped offering rapid tests as part of their free testing programs for the general public.

“We were seeing shortages in the tests across the county, so we are really prioritizi­ng supplies for our school districts to have quick turnaround for testing, to help them if needed,” said Stefany Busch, a county spokeswoma­n. She noted that tests that are processed in laboratori­es — which take longer to give results — remain plentiful.

Indeed, parts of the U.S. testing system are faring

better than during prior surges. The large commercial labs that process the majority of tests performed at hospitals and testing sites still report plenty of capacity. Labcorp, one of the biggest laboratory chains, said last week it was delivering results for 150,000 tests daily, with the ability to double that number.

Still, rapid tests have a clear advantage in that they can be done anywhere and have a 20-minute turnaround time, but most school testing programs still rely on tests processed in labs, which return results in a day or two.

In general, the U.S. has been far more cautious about embracing rapid, at-home testing technology compared to countries like Britain that have rolled it out widely. The Food and Drug Administra­tion has authorized only about a half-dozen such tests, compared with more than 400 laboratory tests. Many experts, including FDA regulators, still consider laboratory technology the “gold standard” for accuracy because it can detect even minute levels of virus in the nose.

But in his speech this month announcing sweeping new vaccine mandates, Biden highlighte­d rapid tests, saying the government would purchase 280 million of them, as he also called on all schools to set up regular testing programs. Biden said the federal

government will use the Defense Production Act to ensure manufactur­ers have the raw materials they need to make tests.

If those plans sound familiar, it’s because they were part of Biden’s original strategy for dealing with COVID-19 released in January.

A spokeswoma­n for the Department of Health and Human Services said the latest actions “build on earlier initiative­s” as the delta variant-driven surge boosts testing demand.

HHS has announced few details of the $2 billion-plan to purchase rapid tests. For now, retail chains like CVS and Walgreens have placed limits on how many at-home tests customers can buy.

Abbott Laboratori­es — the country’s largest rapid test maker — said it is currently producing “tens of millions” of its BinaxNOW tests per month and working to increase capacity in coming weeks.

The New York Times recently reported that over the summer Abbott shut down one of its factories, laid off employees and destroyed some testing components.

Abbott said those decisions came after vaccinatio­ns climbed and demand for testing plunged. The destroyed supplies had limited shelf life and were not viable for sale in the U.S. or for donation overseas, according to Abbott.

 ?? ABBOTT LABORATORI­ES ?? President Joe Biden is betting on millions more rapid, athome tests, like BinaxNOW, to help curb the latest deadly wave of the COVID-19 pandemic.
ABBOTT LABORATORI­ES President Joe Biden is betting on millions more rapid, athome tests, like BinaxNOW, to help curb the latest deadly wave of the COVID-19 pandemic.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States