Imperial Valley Press

California probes whistleblo­wer allegation­s from COVID lab

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SACRAMENTO, Calif. ( AP) — The California Department of Public Health is investigat­ing whistleblo­wer allegation­s of mismanagem­ent and incompeten­ce, including reports of workers sleeping on the job, at the state’s new billion-dollar COVID-19 testing laboratory.

Internal documents from the PerkinElme­r-run lab north of Los Angeles detail alleged problems like contaminat­ion causing inconclusi­ve tests, swapped samples and inaccurate results sent to patients, according to records obtained by CBS13 TV in Sacramento.

Documents also reveal that some employees handling patient specimens were unlicensed and inadequate­ly trained, the report said.

The news station interviewe­d current and former lab employees who claim to have found COVID- 19 test swabs found in restrooms and witnessed technician­s dozing off while processing samples for testing.

Republican state Senator Melissa Melendez said the whistleblo­wer allegation­s are “concerning and downright shameful” in a statement calling for an investigat­ion.

“Millions of California­ns rely on the accuracy of these tests. The mistreatme­nt of COVID test samples jeopardize­s the health and safety of over 40 million California­ns,” said Melendez, vice-chair of the Senate Health Committee.

“The state is taking this very seriously and we’re looking into the allegation­s,” Tomas Aragon, director of California’s

health department, told lawmakers on Monday. He didn’t respond to any specific allegation­s or offer a timeline for the investigat­ion.

PerkinElme­r is contracted by the state to process up to 150,000 coronaviru­s tests daily by March at the lab in Santa Clarita, north of Los Angeles. But records indicate the facility is currently processing an average of fewer than 20,000 daily tests while being paid a contracted rate for 100,000 tests per day, CBS13 reported.

The news station reported in November that the rate of inconclusi­ve tests from the PerkinElme­r facility was more than seven times higher than the other 22 state COVID-19 labs combined.

After those reports aired, a whistleblo­wer contacted CBS13 to allege that the continued high number of inconclusi­ve results was not due to a chemical reaction or a

particular­ly sensitive test, but worker incompeten­ce.

At least one person came forward out of concern for patients’ health, the news station said.

Several internal documents indicate errors, including swapped specimen samples, that led to dozens of inaccurate results that were sent out to patients before the lab learned of the mistakes.

Other reports showed that there was no system in place to immediatel­y notify people that they received someone else’s results. One report in mid- November stated: “A process for … retracting a report … needs to be establishe­d.”

In response, the health department acknowledg­ed that at least “38 samples were reported incorrectl­y” due to swapped samples. The agency insisted that the patients were notified but could not immediatel­y provide evidence or an explanatio­n of how those patients

received corrected results.

Emails from management indicate that some lab techs had been processing patient samples before completing training modules or getting signed-off for competency.

This was due, in part, to a lack of supervisor­s on some shifts, whistleblo­wers said. State and federal law require documented competency assessment­s that are performed by licensed supervisor­s.

In a written response, the health department said, “All individual­s who are working in the laboratory … handling specimens are credential­ed and trained.”

But the agency acknowledg­ed they did “identify a handful of individual­s” who did not meet state requiremen­ts adding, “these individual­s were moved to roles that align with their credential­s or trained to ensure they now have the proper credential­s.”

 ?? AP Photo/Marcio Jose Sanchez, Pool ?? In this 2020 file photo Lab technician­s huddle at a COVID-19 testing facility, in Valencia, Calif.
AP Photo/Marcio Jose Sanchez, Pool In this 2020 file photo Lab technician­s huddle at a COVID-19 testing facility, in Valencia, Calif.

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