White House goal on testing nursing homes unmet
Nearly two weeks ago the White House urged governors to ensure that every nursing home resident and staff member be tested for the coronavirus within 14 days. Its not going to happen. A review by The Associated Press found that at least half of the states are not going to meet White Houses deadline and some arent even bothering to try.
Many states said the logistics, costs and manpower needs are too great to test all residents and staff in a two-week window. Some say they need another week or so, while others say they need much more time. California, the most populous state, said it is still working to release a plan that would ensure testing capacity for all residents and staff at skilled nursing facilities statewide.
And still other states are questioning whether testing every nursing home resident and staff, regardless of any other factors, is a good use of time and money. At this time it would be fairly useless to do that, said Nebraska Chief Medical Officer Dr. Gary Anthone, adding that the state would have to repeat the tests almost daily to get more than a snapshot in time, and the state doesnt have the capacity when there are others who need to be tested.
Anthone said the state was going to stick with the CDCs guidelines, which call for testing individually when nursing home residents show symptoms or collectively if there is a new confirmed case of COVID-19 in a home.
All of this is probably not as well thought out as it could have been. said Dr. Jim Wright, the medical director at a Virginia nursing home where dozens of residents have died. It sounds more like an impulsive type of directive rather than one that has been completely vetted by providers on the ground. On May 11, Trump heralded his administrations efforts to boost coronavirus testing and said the U.S. had developed the most advanced robust testing system in the world, by far.
https://apnews.com/681479be1d9f1a0fea4d64b1a44d5b9e