The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

Doctor: COVID-19 testing issues gave it test fire drill

- By Larry Lage

ALLEN PARK, MICH. » In twoplus weeks, the NFL kicks off its season. That doesn’t leave the league much time to resolve significan­t issues about its COVID-19 testing procedures.

BioReferen­ce Laboratori­es, which is conducting tests for the league, said Monday an isolated contaminat­ion caused 77 “most likely false positive results,” at its lab in New Jersey. Eleven clubs were affected, and the tests were re-examined and found to be false positives.

“This has been an interestin­g dynamic because what happened this weekend gave the NFL an opportunit­y to do a sort of a test fire drill,” noted Dr. Larry Caplin, who said he consults nearly 20 NFL players and their union about testing protocols, “It exposed issues and potential vulnerabil­ities in their process, and a lot of it relates to the speed in which they’re able to confirm results.”

Among teams reporting false positives, the Minnesota Vikings had 12 team members, the New York Jets 10, the Chicago Bears nine and the Detroit Lions one. In all, 44 players and 33 club personnel drew false positives.

“It’s probably good that it happened now since we’re able to adjust and adapt and figure out the things if it did happen during the season, and kind of what we would do from there,” Vikings coach Mike Zimmer said.

Five labs across the country process PCR tests for the league’s 32 teams and only the New Jersey facility had false positives on Saturday.

The Jets canceled a walkthroug­h Saturday night, but had a full practice Sunday morning after the previously positive tests came back negative. The Bears moved their practice scheduled for Sunday morning to the afternoon.

The Cleveland Browns initially canceled practice, but after re-testing turned up negative tests they decided to have their workout — without their coach.

Browns coach Kevin Stefanski had a false positive test, triggering anxiety for him at home where he lives with his wife and three children.

“I can laugh about it now, but truly it wasn’t fun to have that phone call very early in the morning and not get news that it was potentiall­y an error until later,” he said.

Stefanski said he immediatel­y left his house in order to not put his family at risk. The former Vikings assistant went to a condominiu­m near the team’s facility where he stayed before moving his family to Ohio from Minnesota in the offseason. And, it took four hours before Stefanski learned he was negative.

The 38-year-old Stefanski praised the Browns for the way they handled “a fire drill” with their virus protocols, adding that being held out of practice gave him and his staff a chance to carry out contingenc­y plans if any coaches are out.

“Everything went off without a hitch and I was able to watch 7 on 7 on my iPad about 10 minutes after it ended,” he said. “So, a very unique kind of like a bad dream when you know practice is going on and you’re not there. It felt pretty strange.”

As the NFL moves toward the end of training camp and the start of the season, the scope of testing may expand to family and friends of players.

“I’ve had discussion­s with senior people at the NFLPA and we’re talking about some recommenda­tions that the league hasn’t put into place yet around creating a secondary bubble,” said Caplin, who has 30 years of logistics experience and is the CEO of Pennsylvan­ia-based DOCS Health that helps schools, the military and other clients with healthcare. “That would include potentiall­y testing the people that the players interface with on a regular basis when they’re home.”

Caplin, though, acknowledg­ed there is not a foolproof system in place for any entity to test for COVID-19.

“There is no perfect test, start there,” he said. “All testing has potential to have false positives — or false negatives.”

Buffalo Bills quarterbac­k Josh Allen lamented having a false positive test that kept him off the field Sunday.

“I was super frustrated that I wasn’t here,” Allen said. “Those are reps that I can’t get back. At the same time, I think it was a good opportunit­y for our team to kind of go through a day of adversity like this ... in case it were a game day.”

The games have gone on for the NBA playoffs, which have been played uninterrup­ted in a bubble in Central Florida. The NHL, likewise, has pulled off its postseason plans with its own version of bubbles in Toronto and Edmonton, Alberta.

Major League Baseball, meanwhile, is attempting to play without a so-called bubble and has had to cancel dozens of games due to positive tests.

“The NBA has created an island and everyone on the island gets tested continuous­ly and monitored, and they don’t allow anyone exposed on the island,” Caplin said. “That’s the ideal way to operate. The second best is what the NHL is doing, which is basically they created two bubble environmen­ts where they’re also testing the people working in the restaurant­s and the people working in the hotels.”

The NFL has no bubble plans for this season, and the Miami Dolphins announced Monday their plan for having fans at their first home game on Sept. 20.

Asked whether more or exclusive use of point of care (POC) tests at NFL team facilities would help reduce the chances for a recurrence of the weekend’s false positives, the NFL’s chief medical officer noted the difficulty of such a process.

 ?? SETH WENIG — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Jets quarterbac­k Sam Darnold, left, hands off to Le’Veon Bell during last Thursday’s practice in Florham Park.
SETH WENIG — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Jets quarterbac­k Sam Darnold, left, hands off to Le’Veon Bell during last Thursday’s practice in Florham Park.

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