San Antonio Express-News

Someunited flyers can get a COVID test soon

- By Lori Aratani

In what may be a new strategy for getting people to fly again, United Airlines will become the first U.S. carrier to offer customers coronaviru­s tests.

Starting Oct. 15, United customers traveling between San Francisco and Hawaii will have the option of taking a test before they boardtheir flight. Anegative result would allow them to skip the mandatory 14-day quarantine requiremen­t for travelers headed to the state.

The pilot program will launch at the same time United begins increasing service to Hawaii.

“Our new COVID testing program is another way we are helping customers meet their destinatio­ns’ entry requiremen­ts, safely and convenient­ly,” Toby Enqvist, United’s chief customer officer, said in a news release announcing the program Thursday.

“We’ll look to quickly expand customer testing to other destinatio­ns and U.S. airports later this year to complement our state-ofthe-art cleaning and safety measures that include a mandatory mask policy, antimicrob­ial and electrosta­tic spraying and our hospitalgr­adehepaair filtration systems,” Enqvist said.

United customers will have the option of taking either a rapid test at the airport or a self-collectedm­ailin test before their departure, and will be responsibl­e for paying the cost of the test. The rapid test, with results available in about 15 minutes, will cost $250 and the mail-in test $80.

Until a vaccine is widely available, many in the industry think preflight testing could be key to persuading countries to reopen their borders to travel and getting the public flying again. This week, the Internatio­nal Air Transport Associatio­n urged government­s to work with the industry to implement airport testing programs.

“The key to restoring the freedom of mobility across borders is systematic COVID-19 testing of all travelers before departure,” IATA director general Alexandre de Juniac said. “This will give government­s the confidence to open their borders without complicate­d risk models that see constant changes in the rules imposed on travel. Testing all passengers will give people back their freedom to travel with confidence. And that will put millions of people back to work.”

While testing programs are in place at many airports, including in Germany, Hongkong, Japan and Italy, there is no standard for how the programs are run.

De Juniac said the industry will face several challenges as itmoves to expand testing programs, including implementi­ng standards and ensuring universal acceptance of the results. There must also be an available supply of rapid, accurate, affordable, easy-to-administer tests, he added. Lufthansa, a German carrier that announced this monththat itwould offer coronaviru­s testing for its firstand business-class passengers beginning next month, cited a shortage of tests as a reason for not offering it to all passengers.

De Juniac cited surveys that showed people were willing to be tested and would be more willing to travel if testing were available.

United has partnered with two health care providers tomanage its testingpro­gram. The rapid Abbott ID NOW COVID-19 test, which provides results in about 15 minutes, will be administer­ed by Gohealth Urgent Care and its partner, Dignity Health. Travelers will take the test before boarding their flight.

The mail-in option will be managed by Color. As part of that option, customers traveling between San Francisco andhawaii will receive an email from United giving themthe option to purchase a physician-ordered Color self-collection kit at least 10 days before their departure. Travelers will collect their own sample 72 hours before their departure and return the test via overnight mail or to a drop box at the airport. Color will process the test and return the results via text and/or email.

 ?? United / Gohealth ?? United passengers flying to Hawaii can use the COVID-19 testing facility in San Francisco Internatio­nal Airport starting next month.
United / Gohealth United passengers flying to Hawaii can use the COVID-19 testing facility in San Francisco Internatio­nal Airport starting next month.

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