The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

Higher COVID positivity and testing drop have experts concerned

- By Kasturi Pananjady CTMIRROR.ORG

The last time Connecticu­t’s daily COVID-19 positivity rate was consistent­ly over 3 percent, it was in the middle of April — and the state was reporting almost twice as many tests then as it is now, raising the questions: Does Connecticu­t have good visibility into the spread of COVID in the state, and how important is testing in disease surveillan­ce now that 74 percent of the eligible population in the state has been vaccinated?

At the beginning of the pandemic, COVID-19 tests were scarce and testing volume was low as the state, like the rest of the country, struggled to scale up its testing program. Lower testing numbers today, though, are a product of a shift in strategy in disease surveillan­ce as more U.S. residents get vaccinated — though public health experts agree that the strategy may need to evolve for the country to get a more accurate picture of the spread of the delta variant.

Testing tends to stall in the summer as schools and universiti­es have fewer students to test, but this year’s decline in testing is a natural consequenc­e of the state’s high vaccinatio­n rate. The CDC recommende­d that only fully vaccinated individual­s with symptoms get tested in June, a recommenda­tion it later changed in July.

When the CDC updated its mask guidance for vaccinated individual­s at the end of July, the agency also updated its testing guidelines to recommend that fully vaccinated individual­s with exposure to the virus also get tested within three to five days. The CDC still recommends that fully vaccinated individual­s be excluded from routine testing programs.

The number of reported tests has steadily increased in the past few weeks. Covidestim.org, a disease monitoring tool developed by Yale School of Public Health epidemiolo­gist Ted Cohen, estimates the true number of infections in the state at any given point in time from reported cases.

Cohen is working on improving the model’s accounting of vaccinatio­n in countering infection spread, and the state Department of Public Health's decision to release death data weekly instead of daily complicate­s matters. But with those caveats, Covidestim puts the number of infections in the state "two to two and half times" the reported number of cases in the state at present.

“As vaccines have been rolled out, the importance of testing has been downplayed,” Cohen said. “That's a mistake.”

Regardless of vaccinatio­n status, “it is most important that persons who are sick with symptoms consistent with COVID-19 or are well and have had known exposures be tested for COVID-19,” DPH officials wrote. “We work with local health department­s and testing partners to make testing available, accessible, and without out-of-pocket costs for all individual­s that should get tested.”

Where can you still get tested?

Testing locations are available on the 211 website.

Hartford HealthCare does not currently plan to reopen its mass testing sites, said James Cardon, chief clinical integratio­n officer, at a press conference last week.

"As it stands right now, Hartford HealthCare is providing, it seems to be, sufficient infrastruc­ture to facilitate testing," said Keith Grant, senior system director of Infection Prevention, this week.

“Since a lot of the big testing sites have shut down, we decided that we wanted to move into the mobile testing to provide that,” she said.

The health department has partnered with Charter Oak Health Center to make testing available in neighborho­ods that are showing high infection rates and low vaccinatio­n rates, Arroyo said.

Existing guidance on testing requiremen­ts is based on data on the spread of variants of the virus that are no longer dominant, said Nathan Grubaugh, associate professor at the Yale School of Public Health. “We need to be re-evaluating all of our testing strategies right now to make sure that it matches [the] delta” variant.

Deidre Gifford, the acting commission­er of the Department of Public Health, is expected to announce weekly testing requiremen­ts for unvaccinat­ed nursing home staff in the coming few days.

“As the epidemiolo­gy of COVID-19 changes and as we gather more scientific data on how it spreads, the testing strategies may evolve to help identify spread,” a DPH statement said.

Other surveillan­ce strategies

Testing is one of many tools at the state’s disposal to track the spread of COVID-19 in the state.

When overall testing is low, wastewater monitoring can serve as an important canary in the coal mine as cases increase, Grubaugh said.

“Wastewater was, I think, the most helpful at the beginning of the pandemic, when we didn't have as much testing,” he said. “You're looking at that concern of ... do we have enough testing to really figure out what's going on here, from a population level? Wastewater is a backup plan.”

In Connecticu­t, wastewater monitoring is reported daily by researcher­s at the Yale’s Environmen­tal Engineerin­g Program and covers over “1 million residents in the Stamford, Danbury, Bridgeport, New Haven, Hartford, New London, and Norwich regions,” according to the researcher­s' website.

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