This story is from August 27, 2020
Officials change virus testing advice, bewildering experts
NEW YORK
: US health officials have sparked criticism and confusion after posting guidelines on coronavirus testing from the White House task force that run counter to what scientists say is necessary to control the pandemic.The new guidance says it is not necessary for people who don't feel sick but have been in close contact with infected people to get tested. It was posted earlier this week on the website of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
The CDC previously had advised local health departments to test people who have been within 6 feet of an infected person for more than 15 minutes. But on Monday a CDC testing overview page was changed to say that testing is no longer recommended for symptom-less people who were in close contact situations.
There was a caveat, however. Testing may be recommended for those with health problems that make them more likely to suffer severe illness from an infection, or if their doctor or local state officials advise they get tested.
CDC officials referred all questions to the agency's parent organization, the US Department of Health and Human Services in Washington, DC.
That suggests that HHS ordered the change, not CDC, said Jennifer Nuzzo, a Johns Hopkins University public health researcher.
The officials also said they wanted to emphasize that people should follow measures designed to help stop spread of the virus, like wearing a mask, staying at least 6 feet apart from others and washing hands.
The decision came out of meetings of a White House coronavirus task force, HHS officials said. In a call with reporters later Wednesday, Dr Brett Giroir, the HHS assistant secretary for health, said the guidance language came from the CDC.
But he also said many people were involved in “lots of editing, lots of input." He said federal officials achieved consensus but it was difficult to attribute the final language to any one source. “Its kind of hard to know how much was written by what person,” Giroir said.
Across the country, public health experts called the change bizarre. They noted that testing contacts of infected people is a core element of public health efforts to keep outbreaks in check, and that a large percentage of infected people — the CDC has said as many as 40% — exhibit no symptoms.
“I was taken aback and didn't know that it was under consideration,” said John Auerbach, president of Trust for America's Health, a nonprofit that works to improve US preparedness against disease.
“The recommendation not to test asymptomatic people who likely have been exposed is not in accord with the science.” Ultimately, restricting testing could be self-defeating, because it could skew the numbers and create a perception that rates of infection are higher.
Testing people who appear to be healthy would tend to lower the overall rate of positive results, while narrowing testing to people who are sick would raise the overall positive rate, Auerbach said.
Why HHS would order such a change quickly became a matter of speculation. Dr. Carlos del Rio, an infectious diseases specialist at Emory University, suggested in a tweet that there are two possible explanations.
One is that it may be driven by testing supply issues that in many parts of the country have caused widely reported delays in results of a week or more, he suggested.
In the HHS email, agency officials said that is not the reason, and argued that testing capacity is plentiful.
But Dr Mysheika Roberts, health commissioner for the city of Columbus, Ohio, said testing in her city last month had to be curtailed because of a shortage of reagents used in lab procedures.
She agreed with the idea that whatever the federal guidance is, testing decisions ultimately must be made at the local level. But she she was surprised by the change in federal guidance.
“I feel so strongly that we should test asymptomatic people when the capacity allows you to," she said. "And when we were testing asymptomatic people here in Columbus, we were picking up a large number of individuals.” Another possible explanation for the change is that President Donald Trump simply wants to see case counts drop, and discouraging more people from getting tested is one way to do it, del Rio said in his tweet.
Giroir said the change in guidance was passed by consensus by the White House task force without input from Trump or Vice President Mike Pence. “There was no weight on the scales by the president or the vice president” or HHS Secretary Alex Azar, Giroir said.
Dr Tom Frieden, who was head of the CDC during the Obama administration, said the move follows another recent change: to no longer recommend quarantine for travellers coming from areas where infections are more common.
“Both changes are highly problematic” and need to be better explained, said Frieden, who now is president of Resolve to Save Lives, a nonprofit program that works to prevent epidemics.
Frieden said he, too, believes HHS forced CDC to post the changes. He called it “a sad day” because “CDC is being told what to write on their website." New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo harshly criticized the new CDC recommendations and said the state would not be following the guidance.
“Why would you reverse yourself on the quarantine order? Because they don't want publicity that there is a COVID problem. Because the president's politics are, 'COVID isn't a problem We're past COVID. It's all about the economy,'” Cuomo told reporters on a conference call.
“What possible rationale is there to say, 'You're in close contact with a COVID-positive person. And you don't need a test?'” Cuomo said.
Popular from World
- Bill Gates admits he regrets divorcing Melinda the most: 'It was miserable for me...'
- Educational qualifications of richest people in the world including Elon Musk, Jeff Bezos, Mark Zuckerberg, and others
- US freezes foreign aid for almost all countries including Ukraine, except Israel and Turkey
- Elon Musk's mother uses three words to describe Usha Vance amid racist attacks
- Words matter, and it is back to US non-citizens being termed aliens
end of article
Trending Stories
- Just days after being dumped by Mark Zuckerberg, former Meta COO Sheryl Sandberg gets court notice for 'using Gmail' and deleting emails
- Elon Musk's ex-girlfriend Grimes: I would like to state that the father of my children was ...
- Bill Gates admits he regrets divorcing Melinda the most: 'It was miserable for me...'
- Kumbh Mela: Steve Jobs wife Laurene Powell's flight broke 93-year-old record
- Elon Musk's mother uses three words to describe Usha Vance amid racist attacks
- Derrick Henry’s NFL future takes a dramatic turn as girlfriend Adrianna Rivas and Ravens GM hint at what’s next
- US freezes foreign aid for almost all countries including Ukraine, except Israel and Turkey
Visual Stories
- 10 most beautiful sea animals
- 10 simple and practical ways to achieve internal happiness
- 10 ways to add fiber-rich cabbage in daily diet
- 10 South Indian dishes that are easy to make for breakfast
- From Lion to Butterfly: 10 animals and what do they symbolise
TOP TRENDS
UP NEXT
Start a Conversation
Post comment