Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Testing Cost Varies Widely; Phone App Might Aid Tracing
COVID-19 relief legislation that lets providers in some cases set their own prices on COVID tests has resulted in charges as high as $14,750, a new study finds. Providers billed insurers $144 on average for COVID diagnostic tests, with the prices ranging from one penny all the way up to $14,750, according to a new study in the Journal of General Internal Medicine, which drew on about 182,000 claims for tests provided by independent laboratories and outpatient hospital settings. For comparison, Medicare's rate is $51. (Bannow, 9/15)
As businesses try to recover from the pandemic鈥檚 economic blow while ensuring the safety of workers and customers, many have complained of two obstacles: access to coronavirus testing for their employees and long delays in receiving results. But some have found a reliable workaround. Through a growing number of intermediaries, they can generally obtain test results in one to three days, often by circumventing large national labs like Quest and LabCorp that have experienced backlogs and relying on unused capacity at smaller labs instead. (Scheiber, 9/15)
Kaiser Health News: Lack Of Antigen Test Reporting Leaves Country 鈥楤lind To The Pandemic鈥櫬
More than 20 states either don鈥檛 release or have incomplete data on the rapid antigen tests now considered key to containing the coronavirus, which has sickened more than 6 million Americans. The lapses leave officials and the public in the dark about the true scope of the pandemic as untold numbers of cases go uncounted. The gap will only widen as tens of millions of antigen tests sweep the country. Federal officials are prioritizing the tests to quickly detect COVID-19鈥檚 spread over slower, but more accurate, PCR tests. (Pradhan, Weber and Recht, 9/16)
From the outset of the coronavirus pandemic, nursing homes and other long-term care facilities in Georgia struggled to control a virus that can easily be passed by those who may not show symptoms. But as the state came to have one of the nation鈥檚 highest infection rates, August turned out to be the worst month for the state鈥檚 long-term care facilities, with their death toll climbing past 2,000. (Schrade, 9/15)
Anxiety about coranivus exposure is a reality everyone can relate to these days. And no one likes their privacy trampled. But if your phone could safely tell you that you鈥檝e encountered an infected person, would it help? California public health officials not only hope it will, but are betting that such private alerts will prompt people to quickly call their doctor, get tested and quarantine. So, with the help of students and staff at UCSF and UC San Diego, they are preparing in the next few weeks to test a new app called 鈥淐alifornia COVID Notify鈥 on those campuses they hope will make a dent in the pandemic. (Asimov, 9/15)
Testing woes continue in the U.K., as well 鈥
Hospitals in England say a shortage of COVID-19 tests in the U.K. is jeopardizing medical staffing and preparations for a potential surge in coronavirus cases this winter. Inadequate testing is leading to increased absences in the National Health Service as medical workers are forced to self-isolate while they and their family members wait for test results after possible exposures, according to NHS Providers, a group that represents hospitals. Last weekend hospital leaders in three different cities raised concerns about testing, said Chris Hopson, the group鈥檚 CEO. (Kirka, 9/15)
With Britons fretting last week that a new six-person limit on gatherings would effectively cancel Christmas, Prime Minister Boris Johnson unveiled what he called Operation Moonshot, an audacious plan to test 10 million people every day for the coronavirus and restore life to normal by winter. But by Tuesday, the reality of earthbound life in a pandemic reasserted itself: Before a second wave of the virus had even crested, unprocessed samples overwhelmed Britain鈥檚 labs and people waited in desperation for tests, while the reopening of the country鈥檚 schools and businesses hung in the balance. (Mueller, 9/15)