The Ukiah Daily Journal

Testing on the decline despite variants

- By Lisa Krieger

As new and more contagious variants of the COVID-19 virus emerge in California at a troubling rate, testing for the pathogen has plummeted, challengin­g the state’s effort to trace their spread, discover outbreaks or detect whether they are eluding our vaccines.

Rates of testing have fallen by more than 60% since January’s peak, according to the most re

cent data by the California Department of Public Health. Statewide, a total of 186,112 tests were reported on March 31, down from 477,718 on Jan. 4.

The precipitou­s decline is reflected in Bay Area data, as well, falling about 40% in Santa Cruz County, 30% in Santa Clara, Contra Costa and Alameda counties and 25% in San Mateo County over the past three months. Testing is also down nationally.

“If we are not testing robustly in the community, it narrows our view of where the virus is circulatin­g, and to what level it is spreading,” said Dr. Marty Fenstershe­ib, COVID-19 Testing and Vaccine Officer for the County of Santa Clara. “Testing also allows us to break the chains of transmissi­on and reduce spread, which gives the virus less opportunit­ies to replicate and mutate.”

The decline in testing is understand­able: as cases decline, fewer of us fear exposure. Vaccines are more widespread. And we’re weary of testing, after the year-long pandemic, said experts.

Yet as testing falls, the number and diversity of viral variants is climbing.

In the past week, the number of California cases involving a variant first discovered in Britain grew from 851 to 980.

Cases caused by California’s two homegrown versions of the virus — B.1.427 and B.1.429 — also increased, jumping from about 9,000 to 12,500.

Additional­ly, there has been a tiny uptick in cases involving the worrisome Brazilian variant, which is less responsive to treatment, and the South African variant, which evades vaccines.

On Wednesday, Stanford University reported a total of six confirmed cases in the Bay Area of another new form of the virus, whose emergence in India is coinciding with a surge in cases.

But the reduction in testing means even these startling numbers may undercount the true number of infections circulatin­g throughout the state, experts warn. Does California really have about 2,000 new cases a day, as reported, or is that number artificial­ly low?

“Without population­based testing for public health surveillan­ce purposes, it’s like flying blind,” said infectious disease expert Dr. Gary Schoolnik, a clinician and professor of medicine at Stanford Health Care.

But because the virus is likely to become endemic — persisting in small pockets of the population, even as vaccines limit its spread and blunt its effects — we must continue to monitor it, say experts.

We’ve rarely had a disease where so many people are asymptomat­ic, yet transmit it to others, said Mara G. Aspinall, professor of biomedical diagnostic­s at Arizona State University. “That’s why we need to have a systematic approach to regularly test people.”

Testing remains important even as more California­ns get vaccinated, said Aspinall. That’s because it can detect “breakthrou­gh” cases, where a vaccine fails to protect against infection. Although California does not release data on these incidents, this week Oregon and Washington reported 168 and 102 of those cases, respective­ly.

“It’s critical to help vaccine manufactur­ers understand, quite specifical­ly, what variants are out there, what do they look like, how the virus is changing and how can we ensure that we design around it,” Aspinall said.

Testing could also reveal if, over time, vaccines’ protective immunity starts to fade, and cases start to climb, according to Dr. Peter Piot, director of The London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine.

To be sure, there is growing availabili­ty of quick diagnostic tests, used by doctors to find infections in people who feel sick.

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