The Denver Post

How companies are getting speedy coronaviru­s tests for employees

- By Noam Scheiber

As businesses try to recover from the pandemic’s economic blow while ensuring the safety of workers and customers, many have complained of two obstacles: access to coronaviru­s testing for their employees and long delays in receiving results.

But some have found a reliable workaround. Through a growing number of intermedia­ries, they can generally obtain test results in one to three days, often by circumvent­ing large national labs such as Quest and LabCorp that have experience­d backlogs and relying on unused capacity at smaller labs instead.

The intermedia­ries occupied various corners of the health care galaxy before the pandemic, such as offering treatment on behalf of insurance companies or providing employee access to human resources data. Now they are addressing what Rajaie Batniji, an executive at one of the companies, calls “a supply- chain optimizati­on failure.”

“The bottleneck in the crudest terms is: Are you routing tests to processing labs that can process it immediatel­y?” said Batniji, a physician and co- founder of Collective Health, which administer­s health plans for employers and created a separate testing and screening product during the pandemic. “That ends up being what slows us down.”

Daniel Castillo, chief medical officer of Matrix Medical Network, which is among the companies connecting businesses with laboratori­es, said the solution often meant turning to labs located where the spread of the virus was relatively contained.

“In some places there are spikes and perhaps testing issues; in other parts of the country there are not,” said Castillo, whose company works with health insurers to treat chronic conditions such as diabetes and hypertensi­on. “We might send a test across the country — fly it to Maryland from Arizona.”

While there is not limitless capacity for employers to test workers, Batniji, Castillo and others in the industry said significan­tly

more could do so. Even Quest and LabCorp have said their average turnaround times have dropped significan­tly in recent weeks.

A program intended to catch infections before they result in outbreaks typically requires testing a substantia­l portion of people in a shared space once a week, if not more frequently, whether or not they have symptoms. Mike Boots, an epidemiolo­gist at the University of California Berkeley, said that such testing could be enormously beneficial but that it must be combined with other measures, such as distancing and contact tracing, to be effective.

For PCR tests — which detect the virus’s genetic material and are the gold standard of accuracy — the process typically costs around $ 100 per test per person. Even less sensitive tests, which experts increasing­ly recommend as a screening tool, can add up, and most currently require special equipment and a health profession­al to administer them.

As a result, decisions about testing often reveal less about availabili­ty than about the economics of a business and the value it places on driving down workplace transmissi­on.

Businesses for which an outbreak among employees would be extremely costly — possibly curtailing or halting operations — are generally the most likely to seek out tests.

“If there is a significan­t probabilit­y of a shutdown, it’s a nobrainer — you’re going to do everything you can privately to stop it,” said Jonathan Kolstad, an economist at Berkeley who has written about efficient means of mass testing and has set up a company to help promote it. “But in some cases, you don’t get a shutdown.”

In those cases, Kolstad and other economists said, employers are unlikely to carry out testing until it is cheaper and faster.

Cameron Manufactur­ing in upstate New York is putting a premium on employee testing. The company, which makes conveyor belts and other equipment for food and dairy processors, only briefly shut down because of the pandemic, but many customers delayed sales visits and installati­on work, wary of admitting outsiders.

“It’s affecting us revenue- wise,” Matthew Sharpe, the company’s chief executive, said in an interview in August. “We haven’t had major contracts canceled, but they’ve been pushed out into next year.”

So that month, Sharpe began regular PCR testing for members of his sales and engineerin­g teams, who typically travel to customers’ work sites.

Workers are also tested before and after they travel to a “hot” state for work, which could otherwise require isolating themselves for several days upon returning. Sharpe said Cameron employees received test results through a website within 36 hours and could use the informatio­n to establish their health status to customers.

Other employers have begun regular testing of asymptomat­ic workers for similar reasons.

Some, such as meat processors Tyson Foods and JBS, have done so after outbreaks forced them to shut down facilities temporaril­y, and in the face of pressure from the United Food and Commercial Workers Internatio­nal Union. Representa­tives of both companies said they had begun testing to help protect workers.

But the flip side of this calculus, some economists said, is that employers who believe they can continue to operate even if a number of workers become infected will often forgo the expense of testing.

Zack Cooper, an economist at Yale’s School of Public Health, who contribute­d to a recent Rockefelle­r Foundation report on a national testing plan, said many businesses faced a key considerat­ion: “If an employee gets sick, will they be able to bring someone else in to do their job?”

Some employers may also worry that knowledge of infections they discover through testing could expose them to lawsuits from workers or customers if they continue operating.

Many experts argue that more widespread testing by employers will ultimately hinge less on capacity than on cost.

They recommend greater use of tests that are less sensitive but faster and cheaper than PCR tests, but those tests have experience­d regulatory hurdles and other bottleneck­s.

“If it was easy as taking a temperatur­e,” said Lawrence Katz, a labor economist at Harvard, “then no doubt every employer and every office you went into would be testing people all the time.”

 ?? Libby March, © The New York Times Co. ?? A welder works at Cameron Manufactur­ing, which only briefly shut down because of the coronaviru­s pandemic, in Horseheads, N. Y., on Aug. 25.
Libby March, © The New York Times Co. A welder works at Cameron Manufactur­ing, which only briefly shut down because of the coronaviru­s pandemic, in Horseheads, N. Y., on Aug. 25.
 ?? Libby March, © The New York Times Co. ?? A worker at Cameron Manufactur­ing in August. Intermedia­ries are finding labs with capacity for some companies seeking to make sure workers are virus- free.
Libby March, © The New York Times Co. A worker at Cameron Manufactur­ing in August. Intermedia­ries are finding labs with capacity for some companies seeking to make sure workers are virus- free.

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