Millions more coronavirus tests will be needed to safely reopen the country, the chairman of the Senate HELP Committee said at a hearing Thursday.
Sen. Lamar Alexander (R-Tenn.) called the more than 7 million diagnostic tests run to date “impressive, but not nearly enough” adding “there is no safe path forward to combat the novel coronavirus without adequate testing.”
His measured remarks were a contrast to the committee’s ranking Democrat, Sen. Patty Murray of Washington, who slammed the Trump administration for not laying out specific testing goals for each state, saying a lack of national planning is slowing the reopening of businesses and schools.
The assessments at a hearing on National Institutes of Health efforts to develop new tests came as officials aim to surpass 2 million tests a week by June. The NIH’s Rapid Acceleration of Diagnostics, or RADx, initiative aims to speed point-of-care tests to market by the end of the summer that could be used to regularly on returning workers, according to NIH Director Francis Collins.
More than 1,000 developers have already expressed interest in the program, and 79 have submitted full applications a little more than a week after it was launched — a response Collins said he has not seen in his 27 years at NIH.
“The problem isn’t a lack of innovation, it’s a lack of national leadership and a plan from the White House,” Murray said. “You can innovate the fastest car in the world — it still won’t get you where you’re going without a good driver and good directions.”
The Harvard Global Health Institute released new data Thursday that suggest more than 900,000 coronavirus tests need to be completed daily to consider safely relax distancing measures, as a growing number of states are doing.
That number is significantly higher than the approximately 250,000 tests per day the country is currently running, according to data from The COVID Tracking Project. Premier Inc., a group purchasing organization, released a survey Thursday that found health systems will need to at least triple the current testing capacity to restore nonemergency services even partially.
Premier’s survey found two factors that are major obstacles to increasing coronavirus testing: not enough chemical reagents needed to perform tests and shortages of swabs to take patient samples.
“A core component of any reopening strategy is broad testing capacity to minimize resurgence of COVID-19,” said Premier President Michael Alkire in a press release. “However, current restrictions on capacity and shortages of swabs and reagents force health systems to limit testing, prioritizing patients and front-line workers who are symptomatic.”