USA TODAY US Edition

Other Views: Public access to accurate and reliable testing

- Jeff Shuren, M.D., J.D., director, Center for Devices and Radiologic­al Health, Food and Drug Administra­tion:

“When the science supports the test, the FDA has and will authorize them. The FDA has issued emergency use authorizat­ion for nine over-the-counter tests, including three that were authorized within one week. We are focused on ensuring the American public has access to appropriat­ely accurate and reliable COVID-19 tests. Using inaccurate or poor performing tests endangers lives and thwarts our ability to stop the spread of the disease. Failing to accurately identify people likely to spread COVID-19 does not best serve the American public and will continue to harm those most susceptibl­e to this devastatin­g virus.”

Lancaster (Pennsylvan­ia) Online, Editorial Board:

“The Biden administra­tion should have foreseen this need and ensured there was no drop-off in production or availabili­ty of rapid testing kits, which is exactly what happened over the summer. State government­s, too, could have used some of the millions in federal COVID-19 relief funds they’re sitting on to proactivel­y order rapid testing kits, and thus they share some of the blame. But this problem starts at the top . ... This should have been a priority ongoing aspect of the government’s response the moment reliable rapid testing kits became available last year. We read about their successful deployment for profession­al sports leagues and Hollywood production­s. Essentiall­y, those with money have had the most access to these tests. That has come at the expense of families.”

Michael J. Mina and Steven Phillips, The New York Times:

“The White House should also treat rapid testing with the same urgency and private sector partnershi­p approach that Operation Warp Speed pioneered for vaccines . ... The U.S. government should provide rapid tests to every American household, business and organizati­on for free to complement the vaccinatio­n campaign and make abiding by the vaccine mandate more feasible . ... Economic analyses predicted that a major government-funded rapid testing program that reached every American could add as much as $50 billion to the gross domestic product and save tens of thousands of lives or more.”

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