Texarkana Gazette

Ramp up COVID treatment

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The nation’s response to the pandemic has taken on a new phase, as mask mandates and social distancing give way to homebased testing and outpatient treatments. That’s why it’s essential the Biden administra­tion get its new “test-totreat” program up to speed. With new infections rising in Florida and nationally, the program is vital for helping a fatigued nation manage this ongoing outbreak.

The program, announced in March, is meant to control COVID-19 hospitaliz­ations and deaths by providing antiviral pills on the spot to people who test positive for the virus. It’s another step in the government’s evolution of making individual­s more involved in the nation’s response. As a recent report by Kaiser Health News explains, Pfizer’s Paxlovid and Merck’s Lagevrio are both designed to be started within five days of symptoms appearing. Millions of chronicall­y ill and older Americans are eligible, and more people may qualify soon, but many Americans don’t have access to the program. It’s ridiculous that cost and bureaucrat­ic hurdles are still underminin­g this public health effort more than two years after COVID-19 exploded on the scene.

As envisioned, the program allows people with COVID-19 symptoms to get tested, be prescribed antiviral pills and fill the prescripti­on in a single visit. The federal government and many state and local health department­s direct residents to an online national map of test-to-treat sites. But as of two weeks ago, large swaths of the country had no test-to-treat pharmacies or health centers listed, according to a Kaiser survey. The program’s largest participan­t, CVS, had technical issues that made booking an appointmen­t difficult. The roll out has exposed America’s fragmented public health system, where the federal, state and local government­s all play a role. And it shows how high, upfront costs are barriers to keeping people healthy and hospitals operating as normal.

The federal government has set aside nearly 400,000 courses of the antivirals for its federal pharmacy partners — about a quarter of the total supply since the program began, according to Kaiser. Although the cost of the pills is covered by the federal government, obtaining a prescripti­on at participat­ing pharmacies can be expensive, upwards of $100 for exam appointmen­ts. Kaiser also found that finding treatment might be impossible. While CVS said it is working to fix a software glitch affecting in-person appointmen­ts, some Americans, especially seniors, may lack the equipment or skills for telehealth visits. And many rural communitie­s that lack doctors, clinics and pharmacies are underserve­d, forcing people to drive long distances for hours to participat­e.

This is unacceptab­le. The nation is rightly moving away from top-down restrictio­ns on masks and movement. In-home tests and treatments are more widely available, reflecting how far America has come in its public health response. But a nimbler strategy depends on execution. With cases in Florida nearly doubling over the last two weeks, and new infections nationwide up 51%, the “test-to-treat” program is critical to curbing the spread and an unmanageab­le spike in hospitaliz­ations.

The administra­tion needs to commit enough resources to enroll more providers and to make the applicatio­n process more reliable and convenient. But the federal government needs to get this right, and then use the program to its full potential.

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