Wash. Lawsuit Says An Ill. Covid Tester Lied To Patients, Stored Samples Poorly
Washington state Attorney General Bob Ferguson's suit alleges the Center for COVID Control, which had about 300 U.S. locations, sometimes even faked, delayed or failed to provide results to patients at all. Other news outlets cover developments in covid testing across the nation.
Seattle Times:
COVID Testing Company Faked Test Results, Lied To Patients, WA AG Lawsuit Says
An Illinois-based coronavirus testing company with at least 13 sites in Washington, faked or delayed test results (or provided none at all), lied to patients and failed to properly store test samples, according to a lawsuit filed Monday by Washington state Attorney General Bob Ferguson. The lawsuit, filed in King County Superior Court, describes how the company, Center for COVID Control, expanded to about 300 U.S. locations and allegedly took advantage of residents at a time when frequent testing was in high demand as a “critical tool in the fight against COVID-19.” (Takahama, 1/31)
In other testing news —
Lansing State Journal:
Meijer To Offer Free At-Home PCR Testing At Pharmacy Locations
Meijer announced plans Monday to offer at-home COVID-19 PCR tests free to customers throughout the Midwest at its locations with pharmacies. The Grand Rapids-based grocery store chain is partnering with eTrueNorth, a Texas-based health care technology company, to provide at-home versions of the polymerase chain reaction (PCR) test, which experts believe to be the most accurate COVID-19 exam. According to a press release, Meijer is the first retail pharmacy to offer PCR tests at no charge. (Weber, 1/31)
ABC News:
New York City Will Offer Free, At-Home Delivery Of COVID-19 Antiviral Pills
New York City has begun offering free, same day at-home delivery of COVID-19 antiviral pills to eligible residents although supplies remain limited. The program was announced by Mayor Eric Adams at a press conference Sunday at Jacobi Medical Center in the Bronx. (Kekatos, 1/31)
The Mercury News:
Santa Clara County Officials Announce Stricter Testing Rules For Healthcare Providers
Santa Clara County on Monday began requiring healthcare providers to offer patients a COVID-19 test within 24 hours in an attempt to shift more testing responsibility to hospitals and clinics who the county says haven’t been doing their part. “The county has been carrying a disproportionate burden of testing throughout the pandemic,” said Health Officer Dr. Sara Cody at a press conference Monday. “By a very wide margin.” The new stricter guideline narrows the county’s previous rules in September 2020 that required providers to get back to members by the end of the following day after a request for a test. (Greschler, 1/31)
NPR:
When A Positive COVID Tests Means Losing Work, There's Little Incentive To Test
A major public health tenet is that testing is critical for controlling viral spread, but Cristina San Martin could have found plenty of reasons not to test for COVID-19. At-home rapid tests have been sold out, and lines at lab testing sites have wrapped around the block and booked a week in advance. As a dog washer at a grooming salon, San Martin can't afford $150 to test at an urgent-care site. (Noguchi, 2/1)
Also, how incomplete data has hurt pandemic response efforts —
The Boston Globe:
How Patchy COVID Data Hampered The Pandemic Response
On Friday, the Centers for Disease Control reported more than half a million new positive cases of COVID, a daily figure that serves as a crucial barometer for a nation muddling its way through the Omicron wave. But the actual number of new infections, which may well be higher, is a mystery — just like the overall number of people who have been infected so far. Two years after COVID began spreading in this country, the United States is operating with patchy and incomplete data about the virus, a problem experts say has hampered the response to one variant after another and leaves the country just as vulnerable to the next one. (Bidgood, 2/1)