Rome News-Tribune

Kemp: Tests ready for all Georgians

♦ Identifyin­g cases quickly will allow health officials to implement contact tracing.

- By Beau Evans Capitol Beat News Service

Gov. Brian Kemp announced Thursday that anyone in Georgia can be tested for coronaviru­s after expanding the criteria beyond only those with symptoms, health-care workers, the elderly and the chronicall­y ill.

Shortages in testing supplies like nasal swabs and diagnostic kits had previously forced state health officials to limit tests to groups most at risk of contractin­g the virus.

But help from universiti­es, corporatio­ns and the federal government has boosted the state’s testing capacity in recent weeks ahead of a push for contact tracing to head off local outbreaks before they start, the governor said at a news conference Thursday.

“Let’s build on this momentum in the days and weeks to come,” Kemp said.

As of late Thursday afternoon, around 31,000 people in Georgia had tested positive for COVID-19, the disease caused by the novel strain of coronaviru­s that sparked a global pandemic. It had killed 1,340 Georgians.

Testing is a critical part of the push to curb the virus’ spread now that previously shuttered businesses have started reopening in Georgia and the state’s shelterin-place order has largely been lifted.

Around 110,000 tests were done in Georgia in last two weeks, said the state’s public health commission­er, Dr. Kathleen Toomey. That accounts for more than half of the total roughly 217,000 tests take through Thursday afternoon.

Identifyin­g positive cases quickly will allow health officials to implement contact tracing, a meticulous process that identifies the web of interactio­ns that an infected person has with others.

Toomey said Thursday the state has brought on about 550 workers and students to perform contact-tracing tasks, marking about half of the full 1,000 tracers that are needed.

“We want to be able to identify everyone in the community who may be infected, whether symptomati­c or not, so that we can ensure we can stop that spread,” Toomey said.

As the outbreak in hard-hit Albany starts to ease, health officials are now turning their attention to the Gainesvill­e area in Hall County where an outbreak affecting poultry workers in the Latino community is occurring.

Georgia Insurance Commission­er John King, who was born in Mexico and is bilingual, said Thursday he is working with local Hall County leaders to broadcast Spanish-language messages on social distancing and protective measures to the community.

“This task force will focus on communicat­ing with them in their own language,” King said.

Beyond the Gainesvill­e area, elderly care facilities continue to be a top priority for health officials and members of the Georgia National Guard, which has been busy disinfecti­ng the state’s 790 long-term care facilities over the past month.

Kemp said Thursday elderly residents in those facilities have accounted for more than half of all deaths in Georgia caused by the virus to date.

Meanwhile, the federal government is poised to send 210,000 test swabs to Georgia in weekly shipments throughout May, said the state’s emergency management director, Homer Bryson.

 ?? Curtis Compton ?? Gov. Brian Kemp wears a mask and urges fellow citizens to do the same after touring the temporary medical pod that has been placed at Phoebe Putney on May 5 in Albany.
Curtis Compton Gov. Brian Kemp wears a mask and urges fellow citizens to do the same after touring the temporary medical pod that has been placed at Phoebe Putney on May 5 in Albany.

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