Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Who Gets Rapid COVID Tests First? HHS Sending To States For Assisted Living Facilities, Schools
A federal official said Tuesday the government plans to ship rapid coronavirus tests to assisted living facilities, moving to fill a testing gap for older adults who don鈥檛 need the constant attention of a nursing home. Health and Human Services Assistant Secretary for Health Adm. Brett Giroir said assisted living facilities will be followed by senior day care centers and home health agencies in getting the tests. (Alonso-Zaldivar, 9/2)
The administration is touting the new devices, which received emergency authorization by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) last week, as a major advance in the country鈥檚 testing capabilities, following months of delays and setbacks that have plagued the country鈥檚 response to the pandemic. The federal government will purchase 150 million of the tests to deploy through the remainder of 2020, administration officials announced last week. On Tuesday, Giroir provided more details on their deployment. (Sullivan, 9/1)
The federal government is deploying extra聽coronavirus testing materials, including Abbott鈥檚 new rapid test kits,聽to areas of the country recently hit hard by natural disasters,聽Assistant Secretary for Health聽Adm. Brett Giroir said Tuesday. Hurricane Laura in Louisiana and the wildfires on the West Coast have prompted the evacuation of hundreds of thousands of people.聽(Feuer, 9/1)
In other testing news 鈥
Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis is ordering state agencies to end their relationships with Quest Diagnostics after the large medical laboratory said it had mistakenly delayed reporting the results of nearly 75,000 coronavirus tests to the state. The delayed results dated as far back as April. Quest has apologized, saying a technical error was at fault. (Chappell, 9/1)
A month after a state public health computer database failure caused the distortion of COVID-19 test results across California and disrupted the state鈥檚 response to the pandemic, the Newsom administration on Tuesday announced that a new reporting system will be online in October. The state signed a contract with software company OptumInsight Inc. for a database that will handle all COVID-19 testing results, replacing the troubled California Reportable Disease Information Exchange, or CalREDIE. (Willon, 9/1)
Why have employees wait in drive-thru lines when they could get COVID-19 testing through their companies, much as they get flu shots? (Wu, 9/2)
The head of an association representing German medical laboratories has criticized proposals to use veterinary and industrial labs to process coronavirus tests. Andreas Bobrowksi, chairman of the medical laboratories association BDL, says the capacity to conduct more tests is limited by the shortage of materials required to process them, which he says has been 鈥渃overed up by rationing.鈥 (9/1)
In other developments on tracing and tracking the virus 鈥
Apple and Google said Tuesday they鈥檙e expanding coronavirus warning software so that state health agencies can participate without having to create customized apps. The new option, called 鈥渆xposure notifications express,鈥 removes one of the key barriers to adoption that led to a slow start to the software, which can warn people when they come in close contact with someone who has been diagnosed with the coronavirus. So far, only six U.S. states have created apps that work with Apple and Google鈥檚 software. (Albergotti, 9/1)
Apple and Google are trying to get more U.S. states to adopt their phone-based approach for tracing and curbing the spread of the coronavirus by building more of the necessary technology directly into phone software.That could make it much easier for people to get the tool on their phone even if their local public health agency hasn鈥檛 built its own compatible app. (O'Brien, 9/1)