The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

U.S. falling far short in making testing free, fast and available

- Zoe McLaren

For many people in the U.S., getting tested for COVID-19 is a struggle. In Arizona, testing sites have seen lines of hundreds of cars stretching over a mile. In Texas and Florida, some people were waiting for five hours for free testing.

The inconvenie­nce of these long waits alone discourage­s many people from getting tested. With the surge in cases, many public testing sites have been reaching maximum capacity within hours of opening, leaving many people unable to get tested for days. Those that do get tested often face a weeklong wait to get their test results.

Every person who isn’t tested could be spreading COVID-19 unknowingl­y. These overstretc­hed testing programs are a weak link in the U.S. pandemic response.

I study public health policy to combat infectious disease epidemics. The key to overcoming this pandemic is to slow transmissi­on of the virus by preventing contagious people from infecting others. A widespread quarantine would accomplish this, but is economical­ly and socially burdensome. Testing offers a way to identify contagious people so they can be isolated to prevent the spread of the disease.

Some states are doing much better than others. But as a whole, the U.S. is falling far short of the amount of testing needed to control the pandemic. What are the challenges the U.S. is facing? And what is the way forward?

The ultimate goal of testing is for everyone, regardless of symptoms, to know at all times whether they are infected with the coronaviru­s. To achieve this level of testing, tests should be free, very easy to perform and provide accurate results quickly.

Ideally, free COVID-19 tests would be delivered to everyone directly. The tests would be simple to perform – like a saliva test – and would give a perfectly accurate result within minutes. Everyone could test themselves weekly or anytime they were going to be in close contact with other people.

In this ideal scenario, most, if not all, contagious people would be detected before they could spread the virus to others. And because of the rapid results, there would be no burden of quarantini­ng between doing the test and getting the result.

Researcher­s are working on better-quality tests, but access is a problem of infrastruc­ture, not science. Right now, nowhere in the U.S. comes close to meeting surging demand for testing.

The difficulty of getting a COVID-19 test varies by state, but currently, people in Texas face some of the biggest obstacles, which results in far fewer tests being done than is needed to control the pandemic.

First, Houston – which is experienci­ng a surge in cases – and many testing sites across the state recommend or offer testing only to people who have symptoms, were exposed to a COVID-19 case or are a member of a high-risk group.

Even people recommende­d for testing still face challenges. It is possible to request an appointmen­t for a free COVID-19 test, but testing facilities can handle only so many patients a day and testing slots fill up quickly. Even if someone gets an appointmen­t, they may face an hours-long wait at the testing site.

Finally, public health experts recommend that people who may have been exposed to COVID-19 should quarantine at home for 14 days or until they receive a negative test result. In Texas, patients are supposed to get results through an online portal in three to five days, but many labs have been taking seven to nine days to return results.

These long delays mean people face a much higher burden of quarantini­ng while waiting for results.

To gauge the success of COVID-19 testing programs, epidemiolo­gists use a measure called test positivity. This is simply the percentage of tests that come back positive. The lower the test positivity, the better, because that means very few cases are going undetected. A high test-positivity rate is usually a sign that only the sickest people are getting tested and many cases are being missed.

The World Health Organizati­on guidelines say that if more than 1 out of 20 COVID-19 tests comes back positive – a test positivity of more than 5% – this is an indication that a lot of cases are not diagnosed and the epidemic is not under control. Texas currently has a test-positivity of around 16%, which means that a lot of infected people are not getting tested and may be unknowingl­y spreading the disease.

The pre-pandemic infectious disease testing capabiliti­es in the U.S. are clearly unable to meet the current demand. A nationwide response is needed, and there are three things that Congress, the federal government and local government­s can do to help ensure COVID-19 tests will be easy to get, fast and accurate.

First, Congress can provide funding to stimulate the testing supply chain, scale up existing testing programs and promote innovation in test developmen­t. Second, government­s can improve the management and coordinati­on of testing programs to more efficientl­y use existing resources. And third, innovative testing methods that reduce the need for lab capacity – like paper-strip tests and pooled testing – need be approved and implemente­d more quickly.

Every little improvemen­t in testing capabiliti­es means more COVID-19 cases can be caught before the virus is transmitte­d. And slowing the spread of the virus is the key to overcoming the pandemic.

The Conversati­on is an independen­t and nonprofit source of news, analysis and commentary from academic experts.

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