Ontario is scaling back testing as COVID-19 surges. But 'we don't need to know' daily case counts, expert says
CBC
Alexander Brovedani was tested for COVID-19 on Dec. 23 of last year and still doesn't have his results.
For more than two weeks, he's had a cough and is still feeling dizzy, as well as the effects of "brain fog".
Brovedani is a stand-up comedian so with clubs and theatres shuttered by the Ontario government, he doesn't need test results for work. He's isolating at home after getting a positive result on a rapid antigen test. But he would still like a PCR test to be more certain if he has COVID-19.
"I'm doing it for peace of mind, for my loved ones," Brovedani said in an interview. "I feel left in the dark."
Recent changes to Ontario's COVID-19 testing strategy will see access to publicly funded PCR testing restricted to prioritized groups.
And along with keeping potentially infected people like Brovedani in the dark about their COVID-19 status, it will also mean that Ontarians will have a less accurate picture of case numbers in the community.
Some infectious disease experts have spoken out against the province's decision to scale back testing, as well as other measures. But for Dr. Sumon Chakrabarti, the move makes sense.
"The vast majority of the population is now protected with two doses of vaccine. We don't need to know the case number every day, and we certainly don't need to be publishing it on the news every morning."
The infectious disease specialist at Trillium Health Partners in Mississauga says the province is shifting back to the way it tracked viruses pre-pandemic, since COVID-19 case counts are not as closely aligned with severe illness and hospitalization as they were before mass immunization.
"We don't need to test every single person that gets mild symptoms," Chakrabarti said in an interview. "Generally, what we do is we keep a surveillance of what happens at high-risk settings like long-term care and hospitals."
In late December, the government restricted eligibility for publicly funded PCR tests to high-risk individuals who are symptomatic or who are at risk of severe illness from COVID-19. As well, the province announced that most people who test positive on a rapid antigen test will no longer be required to confirm their diagnosis with a PCR test.
And on Thursday, the government moved to reduce access to rapid antigen testing to prioritized groups, including health care workers. The backdrop for the government's changes to the rules is a backlog of testing in the system
The CEO of the Medical Laboratory Professionals' Association of Ontario, Michelle Hoad, agrees with the province's move, and believes they will alleviate the stress on laboratories struggling to keep up.
According to Hoad, Ontario's medical labs were already understaffed when the pandemic began; and now they're overwhelmed
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