USA TODAY International Edition

Doctors worry as fewer in US are getting tested

Drop comes as states ease up on restrictio­ns

- Ken Alltucker

Public heath experts have been critical of states such as Texas and Mississipp­i that tossed aside mask mandatesla­st week at a critical juncture in the nation’s pandemic.

They also warn of another threat to hard- fought gains – the number of Americans getting tested for coronaviru­s has dropped significantly since January.

Though the testing slowdown may be the result of fewer infections, it also might signal too many Americans are growing complacent as the second year of COVID- 19 marches on and millions get vaccinated every week.

Testing remains a staple of the effort to control COVID- 19, along with wearing masks, social distancing, avoiding crowded indoor places and hand hygiene. Though officials are optimistic vaccines will offer protection, some warn the nation might be letting its guard down before enough Americans are protected from the virus.

“A lot of people are just kind of done with the pandemic,” said Mary Hay

den, professor of internal medicine and pathology at Rush Medical College in Chicago.

In January, labs and other testing sites completed an average of nearly 1.9 million tests each day as cases reached record levels. Average daily testing dropped to 1.5 million in February and 1.3 million in March, according to figures from the COVID Tracking Project.

Hayden said the nation’s testing never reached levels that public health officials thought were “adequate or optimal” to control the virus. “We never quite got there,” said Hayden, an Infectious Diseases Society of America fellow. “And now we’re dropping.”

Testing was hard to get when the first major outbreaks emerged last spring in metro Seattle and New York. The nation slowly built capacity with private labs, and now the United States can test more than 2 million each day.

In the summer, testing dropped in several Southern states before cases came roaring back.

Daily cases still surpass levels of late summer and fall, but it’s likely that fewer people were exposed to the virus in recent weeks compared with January’s peak. That means fewer people experience symptoms that compel them to get tested.

As the pandemic rolls into year two, people are less willing to get screened for the virus, Hayden said. Earlier in the pandemic, people sought testing even if they had no symptoms or mild symptoms because they were worried. Based on anecdotal reports, it seems fewer nonsymptom­atic people are getting tested, she said.

Another factor: public health agencies are focusing limited resources on getting more Americans vaccinated. Large testing sites, such as Dodger Stadium in Los Angeles and State Farm Stadium near Phoenix, converted to mass vaccinatio­n sites.

As testing wanes, public health officials are worried about moves by state government to ease social distancing.

Governors in Alabama, Mississipp­i, Texas, Montana and Iowa declared masks are no longer required to prevent the spread of COVID- 19. Of those five states, Johns Hopkins University data shows, only Montana’s ratio of positive tests over the past week is less than 5%, the threshold the World Health Organizati­on recommends before reopening.

Although local government­s and private businesses can make their own choices about wearing masks in public places, such as restaurant­s, eliminatin­g state mask mandates and allowing more people to gather indoors undermines virus control strategies that have been pivotal in reducing spread of COVID- 19, said Romney Humphries, a Vanderbilt University Medical Center professor of pathology, microbiolo­gy and immunology.

She said relaxing social distancing contribute­s to “an overall culture of the pandemic is winding down” and may convince some people testing is less important. “All of those things are creating a sense for the public that the pandemic is over,” Humphries said. “By no means is that true.”

Only 21% of adults had received at least one dose of vaccine as of Thursday, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Four out of five U. S. adults have not been vaccinated.

Those who received just one dose of the Pfizer- BioNTech or Moderna vaccine are not fully protected. Now that the single- dose Johnson & Johnson vaccine is bolstering the nation’s vaccine supplies, President Joe Biden said there should be enough doses for every American by the end of May.

Rebecca Weintraub, an assistant professor at Harvard Medical School’s Department of Global Health and Social Medicine, said people are not fully protected until two weeks after they get both doses of the Pfizer- BioNTech or Moderna vaccines.

Although early data is positive, it’s not known whether the vaccine prevents spread of the virus from an immunized person to others.

“What we do know is the virus is circulatin­g in our communitie­s,” Weintraub said. “And so one of the most effective ways to understand, either am I infected or could I be infected, is to get tested.”

The College of American Pathologis­ts said members noted a “significant decrease” in the number of tests at health care institutio­ns nationwide.

In metro Seattle, testing has dropped in tandem with new cases. At the University of Washington’s lab, tests surged in the late fall. Tests are about half of fall’s peak, said Geoffrey Baird, the university‘ s acting chair of laboratory medicine and pathology.

The vaccine rollout is a pivotal period that Baird and others are watching. If vaccinatio­n efforts slow, more states relax mask mandates and virus variants gain traction, it could lead to another big spike in cases, Baird said.

“All of us in the testing business are wondering what will occur in the coming month or two,” he said.

Hayden said the public must remain vigilant, even as more and more people get vaccinated.

“While the infection rates are much lower, they are still high,” Hayden said. “I don’t think we’re at a place yet where we can really relax our overall strategies and reduce testing.”

Pulling health orders creates “a sense for the public that the pandemic is over. By no means is that true.” Romney Humphries Vanderbilt University Medical Center

 ?? ROBYN BECK/ AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? In January, the U. S. saw an average of nearly 1.9 million coronaviru­s tests completed each day. It has fallen to 1.3 million. One reason may be test sites, such as Dodger Stadium, are now vaccinatio­n sites.
ROBYN BECK/ AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES In January, the U. S. saw an average of nearly 1.9 million coronaviru­s tests completed each day. It has fallen to 1.3 million. One reason may be test sites, such as Dodger Stadium, are now vaccinatio­n sites.
 ?? JAE C. HONG/ AP ?? Testing has fallen before. In summer, testing dropped in several Southern states before COVID- 19 cases came roaring back.
JAE C. HONG/ AP Testing has fallen before. In summer, testing dropped in several Southern states before COVID- 19 cases came roaring back.

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