Houston Chronicle Sunday

For many, getting tested means long waits or added expenses

- By Adeel Hassan and Anna P. Kambhampat­y

Many Americans have been waiting in long lines at free testing sites since before the Christmas and New Year’s holiday rush. Plenty of others are avoiding the lines and paying $20 or more for overthe-counter, at-home coronaviru­s tests — if they can find one.

Out of options, some have headed to crowded emergency rooms in hopes of getting tested, putting themselves and others at greater risk and potentiall­y delaying emergency care for ill and injured people.

“The current demand for testing far exceeds the testing resources that are available,” said Michael Osterholm, a public health researcher and director of the Center for Infectious Disease Research and Policy at the University of Minnesota.

That was evident this week as many people searched for tests to take before returning to school or work. President Joe Biden addressed the problem last month by announcing that 500 million tests would be available for free starting in January. But his administra­tion has not given a launch date for the program, and that number of tests will not go far in a country with a population of some 330 million.

Jenna Zitomer, 25, said that her family of five in Westcheste­r, N.Y., has spent around $680 on rapid tests in recent months. “It’s pretty crazy, especially since that’s well over half a paycheck for me,” said Zitomer, a research specialist. “It feels like something we need to start budgeting for every month now, like groceries or utilities. For my family, not having access to testing could mean exposing multiple severely immunocomp­romised people to COVID-19. That basically makes it life or death.”

Zitomer added that at her local testing center, “lines have gotten so long that they started canceling appointmen­ts and full days of testing because the drive-thru lines cause traffic problems.”

Britt Crow-Miller, 35, a senior lecturer at the University of Massachuse­tts Amherst, said that her family has spent around $500 on at-home test kits. With two adults and three children, a single round costs around $100. “Who can afford that every time someone has the sniffles?” she said. “As a person fortunate enough to be wellemploy­ed and have a partner who is also well-employed, I am very conscious of the fact that at-home testing is essentiall­y a luxury.”

And yet, Crow-Miller said that if one of the children “wakes up with a scratchy throat, I don’t feel like a responsibl­e community member sending them to school without first giving them a test.”

Elizabeth Sasser, 24, a network planning analyst living in Syracuse, N.Y., said her expenses for tests — about $300 — was money well spent. “My family also did have asymptomat­ic positives,” she said, “which would have likely led to more infections if it had not been for the prior purchase of athome tests.”

There have been gaps in testing capacity since the start of the pandemic.

In early 2020, researcher­s scrambled to find the swabs and liquids needed to collect and store samples being sent to laboratori­es for polymerase chain reaction, or PCR, tests, considered the gold standard for viral detection. U.S. testing backlogs continued into that summer, in part because there was a shortage of tiny pieces of tapered plastic, called pipette tips, that are used to quickly and precisely move liquid between vials.

The equipment shortage is no longer the weak link in the supply chain, but new problems have arisen. One is simply that demand is outstrippi­ng supply.

There is also preliminar­y evidence that the at-home antigen tests many Americans rely on — at least as currently administer­ed, with a nasal swab — may fail to detect some omicron cases in the first days of infection. Researcher­s say omicron replicates faster or earlier in the throat and mouth than in the nose.

That could complicate the strategy for beating back the current wave, in which the latest data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention indicate that omicron accounts for 95 percent of new cases.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States