CVS to return $43M in coronavirus stimulus payments

CVS to return $43M in coronavirus stimulus payments

CVS Health announced in a letter to Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar on Tuesday that the company will return roughly $43.3 million it received in payments through the CARES Act Provider Relief Fund.

“As you know, CVS Health did not solicit these funds but received them as part of an automatic distribution by the Department of Health and Human Services,” CVS President & CEO Larry Merlo wrote. “We have made the decision to return the funds and forgo participation in subsequent disbursements.”

Merlo hopes returning the funds will allow HHS to provide additional support to other providers facing “significant financial challenges” as a result of the coronavirus pandemic.

“In my view, returning these funds is part of CVS Health’s overall plan to do everything we can to help the communities we serve respond to the pandemic,” Merlo added. “We look forward to our continued partnership.”

Larry Merlo, CEO of CVS, speaks about the coronavirus in the Rose Garden of the White House, Monday, April 27, 2020, in Washington, as President Donald Trump listens. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)

Merlo said CVS plans to establish an additional 1,000 COVID-19 testing sites at select CVS Pharmacy drive-thru locations by the end of May.

“Recognizing that underserved communities are disproportionately affected by the virus, more than half of those sites will serve communities with the greatest need as measured by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Social Vulnerability Index,” Merlo added.

Cars idle in line as patients wait to self-take a COVID-19 virus test at a drive-thru for the CVS Pharmacy in Danvers, Mass., Friday, May 15, 2020. CVS has expanded its testing sites. (AP Photo/Charles Krupa)

CVS will also waive deductibles and cost-sharing for telemedicine visits and inpatient admissions for treatment of COVID-19 or health complications associated with the virus. The company recently waived out-of-pocket costs for in-network primary care visits for Medicare Advantage members through Sept. 30.

I thought that the CARES program was for small businesses ?  Since when does a publicly traded company with a market value of 530 BILLION dollars could be classified as a SMALL BUSINESS ?  Maybe the CFO thought that there would be so many applications that their claim for 43 million would just be lost in the avalanche of applications. According that this https://www1.salary.com/CVS-HEALTH-CORP-Executive-Salaries.html  that money would have paid CVS’ President Larry Merlo’s salary wage package for about TWO YEARS..

Faces Of Pain And The Sound Of Silence

The Chronic Pain Patient Community led by video producer Passionate Pachyderms fires it’s first shot accross the bow in their battle to regain adequate appropriate treatment for all those suffering debilitating Chronic Pain. Grab the tissues, turn up the sound, and get ready for something truly amazingly done.

Each individual pictured is a Chronic/Intractable Pain Patient who represents 450,000 Chronic/Intractable Pain Patients suffering the effects of this crisis. They are unable to obtain appropriate adequate care and/or the long term pain medication they require to function from day to day or have any quality of life.

These Americans are pictured on both their worst days, (which make up the majority of their lives) and on their rare good days, (in most cases before their medications were severely tapered or stopped completely) leaving them in endless cycles of miserably painful days that give way to sleepless and tormented nights. WE ARE THE FACES OF PAIN.

Being robbed at the pharmacy counter ?

Prior to 2020 our Part D prgm was Silver Scripts … and the PBM was Caremark…  and all are part of CVS Health..

Before 2020, the Part D prgms did not have a annual deductible, but in 2020 with our new Part D prgm Humana has a $435 annual deductible, and most/all Part D prgms have a annual deductible.

I looked back to see what we were charged out of pocket cost for the same prescriptions.  Barb has already reached met her $435 deductible so I am trying to compare apples to apples..  The difference in monthly premiums is Humana is about $2.00/month more.

For 5 prescriptions filled after deductible met total out of pocket costs goes as follows:

Silver Scripts                                                         Humana

   $934.54                                                              $99.81

This is an example of how PBM’s are gouging (stealing) money from pts.  All prescriptions were filled at the same independent pharmacy.

Here is a recent article about a whistle blower claims that Caremark (part of CVS Health) is defrauding Medicare Part D on prescription prices

Aetna whistleblower accuses CVS Health’s Caremark of fraud in Medicare Part D drug prices

Our experience would suggest that there could be some validity to this whistle blower’s allegations. For the first quarter of 2020 CVS Health reported a increase in total revenue by 8% and net profit up 43%.  For a mature company (CVS was founded in 1963), it is very unusual – and certainly no where near the norm – for such companies to be able to produce a five fold increase in net profit over the increase of gross revenue.  When open enrollment period opens on Oct 15, 2020, those people currently enrolled in a Silver Scripts prgm might want to use the Medicare website ( https://www.medicare.gov/plan-compare/#/?lang=en ) to compare what their out of pocket costs could be with other part D providers

URGENTLY LOOKING FOR FORMER WALMART PHARMACISTS & PHARM TECHS

URGENTLY LOOKING FOR FORMER WALMART PHARMACISTS & PHARM TECHS

Lawyers involved in the Opioid Litigation are urgently looking to get background and perspective assistance from former Walmart Pharmacists & Pharm Techs.  The questions relate to how Walmart institutionally dealt with questionable prescriptions or prescribers. It is imperative that they get the facts correct and need help.

Please contact either attorney Chuck Gabriel (Chalmers & Adams, LLC), 678.735.5907 or email at CDGabriel@CPBLawGroup.com  or attorney Kyle Oxford (BurnsCharest LLP), 504.799.2846 or email at koxford@burnscharest.com.

A  recent ProPublica article regarding the issue with Walmart https://www.propublica.org/article/walmart-was-almost-charged-criminally-over-opioids-trump-appointees-killed-the-indictment/amp

Call me if you have any questions – Mobile is best number

I have spoke with an attorney from this firm behind this several times and I asked him about confidentially of those who contact them and this is his reply:

“I cannot absolutely guarantee confidentiality, so I won’t promise it… in very rare, but some, circumstances, Attorney Work Product such as investigative interviews can be ordered disclosed – I won’t promise something I cannot deliver with certainty. 

That said, the assurance that we are looking for background and perspective assistance rather than witnesses and testimony ought to provide some assurance. “

 

Interesting email from our Shih Tzu’s Vet

We have used the same Vet clinic for the last 30 yrs +/-. Cuddles is our third Shih Tzu and she is now 10 y/o.  It use to be that senior dogs got ANNUAL Senior Wellness Exams, now they are pushing SEMI-ANNUAL Senior Wellness Exams and since emails or “free” as opposed to mailing at least a postcard.  That being said, I find it interesting that the vet is looking to provide PAIN MANAGEMENT for our senior dogs.

I wonder if us mere Homo sapiens could legally get our classification changed to Canis lupus familiaris so that we could see a Vet to get pain management ?

Dear BARBARA/STEVE,

CUDDLES is due for their Senior Wellness Exam. By sharing life and love with you, your pet has given you a precious gift. Now that your pet is “senior,” you have the opportunity to give something in return: the special care that makes their golden years happy and healthy.  Request an appointment below!

Good senior pet health care requires attention to several factors:

  • Diet and weight management
  • Joint health
  • Cancer screening
  • Heart disease screening
  • Dental maintenance
  • Diabetes screening
  • Function of thyroid, kidneys, and liver
  • Eye and vision health
  • Pain management

Regular exams and testing allow us to determine what is normal for your pet. Many conditions if diagnosed early can be successfully managed leading to better outcomes for your pet and reduced treatment costs for you.

During your senior wellness appointment, our veterinarians recommend:

  • Complete physical exam – evaluates the heart, lungs, eyes, ears, abdomen, joints and skin
  • Urinalysis – detects ph balance, urine crystals, signs of urinary tract infection or bladder cancer
  • Intestinal parasite exam – Check for worms
  • Vaccinations
  • Heartworm test – check for fatal heartworms
  • Early Detection Tests – evaluates liver, kidneys, thyroid, blood sugar, blood cell and platelet count

After the examination and laboratory testing, we will report the results and make our recommendations to you to help keep CUDDLES healthy and happy!

Imperial College model Britain used to justify lockdown a ‘buggy mess’, ‘total unreliable’, experts claim

Imperial College model Britain used to justify lockdown a ‘buggy mess’, ‘total unreliable’, experts claim

https://www.foxnews.com/world/imperial-college-britain-coronavirus-lockdown-buggy-mess-unreliable

The heralded model United Kingdom experts have largely used to guide their coronavirus policies is “totally unreliable,” according to experts.

The criticisms follow a series of policy turnabouts, including Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s decision to extend the national lockdown. The United States also used the model, which predicted upwards of 2.2 million deaths in the US without proper action. The prediction helped influence the White House to adopt a more serious approach to the pandemic.

Experts have derided the coding from Professor Neil Ferguson, warning that it is a “buggy mess that looks more like a bowl of angel hair pasta than a finely tuned piece of programming.”

“In our commercial reality, we would fire anyone for developing code like this and any business that relied on it to produce software for sale would likely go bust,” David Richards, co-founder of British data technology company WANdisco, told the Daily Telegraph.

Ferguson, the virus modeler from Imperial College London and a scientific adviser to the government, warned on March 16 that 500,000 people could die from the pandemic without significant action. Prime Minister Boris Johnson responded by imposing a national lockdown, which has only been loosened within the last week.

The Imperial model works by using code to simulate transport links, population size, social networks and healthcare provisions to predict how coronavirus would spread. Researchers released the code behind it, which developers have criticized as being unreadable.

Scientists from the University of Edinburgh have further claimed that it is impossible to reproduce the same results from the same data using the model. The team got different results when they used different machines, and even different results from the same machines.

“There appears to be a bug in either the creation or re-use of the network file. If we attempt two completely identical runs, only varying in that the second should use the network file produced by the first, the results are quite different,” the Edinburgh researchers wrote on the Github file.

A fix was provided, but it was the first of many bugs found within the program.

“Models must be capable of passing the basic scientific test of producing the same results given the same initial set of parameters…otherwise, there is simply no way of knowing whether they will be reliable,” said Michael Bonsall, Professor of Mathematical Biology at Oxford University.

A spokesperson for the Imperial College COVID19 Response Team said: “The U.K. Government has never relied on a single disease model to inform decision-making. As has been repeatedly stated, decision-making around lockdown was based on a consensus view of the scientific evidence, including several modelling studies by different academic groups.”

“Epidemiology is not a branch of computer science and the conclusions around lockdown rely not on any mathematical model but on the scientific consensus that COVID-19 is a highly transmissible virus with an infection fatality ratio exceeding 0.5pc in the UK.”

As of Saturday, the United Kingdom has confirmed 241,455 cases of coronavirus, behind only the U.S. and Russia; and 34,546 deaths, behind the U.S.

Ferguson himself resigned from his advisory role earlier this month after reports emerged that he defied his own lockdown advice by letting his married lover visit him on two occasions.

 

TWO MONTHS after everyone started sheltering in place because of COVID-19… DOL…comes out with guidelines to protect pharmacy staff

U.S. Department of Labor Issues Alert to Help Keep Retail Pharmacy Workers Safe During the Coronavirus Pandemic

https://www.dol.gov/newsroom/releases/osha/osha20200514-0

WASHINGTON, DC The U.S. Department of Labor’s Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) has issued an alert listing safety tips employers can follow to help protect retail pharmacy workers from exposure to the coronavirus.

Safety measures for retail pharmacies include:

  • Encourage customers to submit prescriptions online or by phone. Allow customers to provide their insurance information verbally or virtually (e.g., through mobile apps or the pharmacy’s website);
  • Increase the use of self-serve checkouts to minimize worker interaction with customers;
  • Frequently clean and disinfect checkout and customer service counters;
  • Install clear plastic barriers between workers and customers at order/pickup counters;
  • Use signage and floor markers to keep waiting customers at least 6 feet from the counter, other customers and pharmacy staff; and
  • Encourage workers to report any safety and health concerns. It is illegal to retaliate against workers for reporting illnesses or for reporting unsafe or unhealthful working conditions.

The new alert is available for download in English and Spanish.

Visit OSHA’s Publications webpage for other useful workplace safety information.

The alert is the latest effort by OSHA to educate and protect America’s workers and employers during the coronavirus pandemic. OSHA has also published Guidance on Preparing Workplaces for COVID-19, a document aimed at helping workers and employers learn about ways to protect themselves and their workplaces during the ongoing pandemic.

Visit OSHA’s COVID-19 webpage frequently for updates. For further information about the coronavirus, please visit the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Under the Occupational Safety and Health Act of 1970, employers are responsible for providing safe and healthful workplaces for their employees. OSHA’s role is to help ensure these conditions for America’s working men and women by setting and enforcing standards, and providing training, education and assistance. For more information, visit www.osha.gov.

The mission of the Department of Labor is to foster, promote and develop the welfare of the wage earners, job seekers and retirees of the United States; improve working conditions; advance opportunities for profitable employment; and assure work-related benefits and rights. If an employer denies equal opportunities, it’s important to take action. Contacting an employment lawyer can help you understand your rights and options, ensuring fair treatment and access to opportunities for all workers.

Agency
Occupational Safety & Health Administration
Date
May 14, 2020
Release Number
20-856-NAT
Contact: Department of Labor National Contact Center
Email
This is part of the same government that is going to get us a treatment and/or vaccine for COVID-19 ?  Hopefully this year ?

Neurosurgeon Says Face Masks Pose Serious Risk to Healthy People

Neurosurgeon Says Face Masks Pose Serious Risk to Healthy People

Every Karen on Facebook is shaming her neighbors for not wearing a face mask. We are being told by governors that if we don’t wear masks we are selfish, horrible human beings with no souls who want Grandma to die a horrible death. Police are tackling people who don’t wear face masks properly in the subway. Grocery stores are throwing maskless people out and denying them service.

But now, there’s another doctor weighing in—besides Dr. Fauci, bonafide sex god and ruler of us all, who also said face masks are largely security theater and of no use to the healthy. Dr. Russell Blaylock, a neurosurgeon, has written an editorial saying that “masks pose serious risks to the healthy.”

First, Blaylock says, there is no scientific evidence that masks are effective against COVID-19 transmission. Pro-science people should care about this.

As for the scientific support for the use of face mask, a recent careful examination of the literature, in which 17 of the best studies were analyzed, concluded that, “ None of the studies established a conclusive relationship between mask/respirator use and protection against influenza infection.”   Keep in mind, no studies have been done to demonstrate that either a cloth mask or the N95 mask has any effect on transmission of the COVID-19 virus. Any recommendations, therefore, have to be based on studies of influenza virus transmission. And, as you have seen, there is no conclusive evidence of their efficiency in controlling flu virus transmission.

It is also instructive to know that until recently, the CDC did not recommend wearing a face mask or covering of any kind, unless a person was known to be infected, that is, until recently. Non-infected people need not wear a mask. When a person has TB we have them wear a mask, not the entire community of non-infected. The recommendations by the CDC and the WHO are not based on any studies of this virus and have never been used to contain any other virus pandemic or epidemic in history.

Beyond the lack of scientific data to support wearing a mask as a deterrent to a virus, Blaylock says the more pressing concern is what can and will happen to the wearer.

Now that we have established that there is no scientific evidence necessitating the wearing of a face mask for prevention, are there dangers to wearing a face mask, especially for long periods? Several studies have indeed found significant problems with wearing such a mask. This can vary from headaches, to increased airway resistance, carbon dioxide accumulation, to hypoxia, all the way to serious life-threatening complications.

There are studies to back that claim up.

In one such study, researchers surveyed 212 healthcare workers (47 males and 165 females) asking about presence of headaches with N95 mask use, duration of the headaches, type of headaches and if the person had preexisting headaches.

They found that about a third of the workers developed headaches with use of the mask, most had preexisting headaches that were worsened by the mask wearing, and 60% required pain medications for relief. As to the cause of the headaches, while straps and pressure from the mask could be causative, the bulk of the evidence points toward hypoxia and/or hypercapnia as the cause.

That is, a reduction in blood oxygenation (hypoxia) or an elevation in blood C02 (hypercapnia). It is known that the N95 mask, if worn for hours, can reduce blood oxygenation as much as 20%, which can lead to a loss of consciousness, as happened to the hapless fellow driving around alone in his car wearing an N95 mask, causing him to pass out, and to crash his car and sustain injuries.

I am sure that we have several cases of elderly individuals or any person with poor lung function passing out, hitting their head. This, of course, can lead to death.

A more recent study involving 159 healthcare workers aged 21 to 35 years of age found that 81% developed headaches from wearing a face mask. Some had pre-existing headaches that were precipitated by the masks. All felt like the headaches affected their work performance.

Blaylock says studies have also shown that face masks impair oxygen intake dramatically, potentially leading to serious problems.

The importance of these findings is that a drop in oxygen levels (hypoxia) is associated with an impairment in immunity. Studies have shown that hypoxia can inhibit the type of main immune cells used to fight viral infections called the CD4+ T-lymphocyte.

This occurs because the hypoxia increases the level of a compound called hypoxia inducible factor-1 (HIF-1), which inhibits T-lymphocytes and stimulates a powerful immune inhibitor cell called the Tregs. . This sets the stage for contracting any infection, including COVID-19 and making the consequences of that infection much graver. In essence, your mask may very well put you at an increased risk of infections and if so, having a much worse outcome.

In other words, if you wear a face mask and contract some sickness, you will not be able to fight it off as effectively as if you had normal blood oxygen levels. The mask could make you sicker. It could also create a “deadly cytokine storm” in some.

There is another danger to wearing these masks on a daily basis, especially if worn for several hours. When a person is infected with a respiratory virus, they will expel some of the virus with each breath.

If they are wearing a mask, especially an N95 mask or other tightly fitting mask, they will be constantly rebreathing the viruses, raising the concentration of the virus in the lungs and the nasal passages. We know that people who have the worst reactions to the coronavirus have the highest concentrations of the virus early on. And this leads to the deadly cytokine storm in a selected number.

How about cancer, heart attacks, and strokes? Blaylock says face masks can make all of those conditions worse.

People with cancer, especially if the cancer has spread, will be at a further risk from prolonged hypoxia as the cancer grows best in a microenvironment that is low in oxygen. Low oxygen also promotes inflammation which can promote the growth, invasion and spread of cancers. Repeated episodes of hypoxia has been proposed as a significant factor in atherosclerosis and hence increases all cardiovascular (heart attacks) and cerebrovascular (strokes) diseases.

If that’s not bad enough, how would you like COVID-19 in your brain?

It gets even more frightening. Newer evidence suggests that in some cases the virus can enter the brain. In most instances it enters the brain by way of the olfactory nerves (smell nerves), which connect directly with the area of the brain dealing with recent memory and memory consolidation. By wearing a mask, the exhaled viruses will not be able to escape and will concentrate in the nasal passages, enter the olfactory nerves and travel into the brain.

Why is it that we only listen to dire predictions from Dr. Fauci and we don’t consult other experts in the field of medicine? Is Anthony Fauci the only qualified person to talk about this virus? Furthermore, if he is, he agrees with Dr. Blaylock that only sick people should wear them and he said so on 60 Minutes. So why aren’t we listening to him?

Editor’s Note: Want to support PJ Media so we can keep telling the truth about China and the virus they unleashed on the world? Join PJ Media VIP and use the promo code WUHAN to get 25% off your VIP membership.

When we had our independent pharmacy,  we developed a very large home medical equipment business which included a couple of hundred home oxygen pt.  If a pt switched from a nasal cannula to a oxygen mask..  it was necessary to increase their oxygen from from the normal 2 LPM up to 5-6 LPM.. so that the mask was being “flushed out” of the exhaled carbon dioxide with each exhaled breath.

Failing to increase the oxygen flow when a pt switched to a mask, resulting in the pt inhaling some carbon dioxide.. which is heavier that ambient air and would settle in the bottom of the lungs and block the lung’s alveoli where oxygen is absorbed by the lungs from the ambient air and the pt’s oxygen saturation in the blood drops.  Resulting in increased hypoxia.

There has been studies of people wearing some form of “mask” for extended periods are experiencing some degree of hypoxia, which can cause certain bodily function to deteriorate.

Check your stash: This Edmond medical marijuana product is being recalled after failing state tests for pesticides

Check your stash: This Edmond medical marijuana product is being recalled after failing state tests for pesticides

https://oklahoman.com/article/5662413/check-your-stash-this-medical-marijuana-product-is-being-recalled-after-failing-state-tests-for-pesticides

Some medical marijuana products made by Moon Mix in Edmond are being recalled after failing required testing for pesticides. These products may not be safe for consumers.

The Oklahoma Medical Marijuana Authority is issuing its first recall of medical marijuana products sold in the state.

Some medical marijuana products made by Moon Mix, a processor in Edmond, failed required state testing for pesticides, and may not be safe for consumers, according to the OMMA.

Products include mints and vape cartridges showing batch number 158 on the labeling.

Patients or caregivers with these products in their possession should contact the dispensary where the products were purchased for information on recall procedures.

Financial reimbursement between patients and dispensaries is to be determined by the dispensaries, an OMMA spokeswoman said.

Moon Mix owner and CEO Austin Fielding could not be reached at the time of publication to determine whether the company would issue refunds for the products to dispensaries.

Dispensaries that carried the product are being asked to assist with the recall and notify patients or caregivers who purchased the Moon Mix items from batch number 158.

Of the 14 COVIS-19 tests, only three delivered consistently reliable results. Even the best had some flaws

Coronavirus (Covid-19) antibody tests: Do you really want one? Think hard about it. Maybe not.

https://clearhealthcosts.com/blog/2020/05/coronavirus-covid-19-antibody-tests-do-you-really-want-one-think-hard-about-it-maybe-not/

Coronavirus testing: It has long been hard to get. Now suddenly in the New York area, tests are freely available.

The test will tell me truly if I have had coronavirus and am therefore immune, right? Or if I was exposed to the virus and magically skipped through, with few symptoms?

The expert opinions are in: Maybe. Maybe not.

We’ve been doing a lot of research about coronavirus (Covid-19), and particularly about testing. I live in the center of the pandemic. Also, I recently tested positive for coronavirus antibodies twice, and negative once, and I’ve been exploring what it means.

First: There are two kinds of tests. Both the respiratory test (nasal swab) and the antibody test have problems as far as accuracy. Beyond that, if the results are correct, experts disagree on what the results mean. If you have a positive respiratory test, that’s pretty clear: You’ve got it. But if you test negative, because of the high error rate, if you have with symptoms, most doctors will say you should still act like you have it.  With the antibody test, same problem: Positive probably means positive, but false positives are clearly possible.

I asked Donald G. McNeil Jr., the star New York Times reporter, who’s a friend from long ago: Is this good news? Am I immune?

He said: “I would NOT trust that antibody test. There are about 50 tests, none are validated yet and we know that some give false positives if you have antibodies to the common cold coronaviruses. Also, we don’t know what level of antibodies confers immunity. So although it’s potentially good news, I would not assume you are immune. Better tests are on the way.”

My negative test from CityMD followed two positive tests, one from the New York State Department of Health, see here, and one at Stony Brook University Medical Center, see here.

Here’s a negative test from Go Health urgent care, partnered with Northwell Health, from a friend.

The ‘immunity passport’ idea — not so fast

For a while, Gov. Andrew Cuomo of New York and others were talking about using antibody testing as a way to give people an “immunity passport.”

“At the time Cuomo talked up antibody testing, using the procedure to establish immunity was widely perceived as a possibility,” Anna Gronewold and Shannon Young wrote over at Politico on May 5. “But that ambition quickly turned to disappointment as the World Health Organization came out against such strategies, saying there is no evidence that antibodies give immunity. Something that seemed to have been a silver bullet was too good to be true. Cuomo stepped back.”

There are several issues: Does the test (and there are about 170 on the market, of varying degrees of usefulness) actually sense the presence of the actual coronavirus implicated in Covid-19? And does presence of those antibodies confirm immunity? Depends on who you listen to, but the smart money is on “Maybe.”

The situation is changing quickly, also.

On April 20, Anthony Fauci told “Good Morning America,” ‘“The problem is that these are tests that need to be validated and calibrated, and many of the tests out there don’t do that. So even though you hear about companies flooding the market with these antibody tests, a lot of them are not validated.

“There’s an assumption — a reasonable assumption — that when you have an antibody that you are protected against reinfection, but that has not been proven for this particular virus. It’s true for other viruses,” he said.”

Testing the tests

Then a team of scientists reported that they had tested the tests. “These tests are crucial to reopening the economy, but public health experts have raised urgent concerns about their quality,” The New York Times reported on April 24. “The new research, completed just days ago and posted online Friday, confirmed some of those fears: Of the 14 tests, only three delivered consistently reliable results. Even the best had some flaws.”

The scientists who started the test of the tests described the testing environment as “the Wild West.”

The FDA has given “emergency use authorization” to a number of tests, though the FDA’s “approval process” is deeply flawed. Dozens of other tests are being used, even without that light approval. The underlying scientific data on test performance is here. But remember, these are self-reported to the FDA and there hasn’t been enough time to really confirm performance.

What the doctors say

One of my friends asked her pediatrician about the tests; the pediatrician responded with this cautionary note from the Westchester, N.Y., county executive warning against using such testing to make personal decisions about exposure to coronavirus.

At one local Westchester medical group, a friend seeking to schedule a test heard from the nurse, “They will do it but the nurse told him that it is not reliable, as her husband and in-laws had the virus and she was exposed to it and not one of them tested positive for antibodies.”

Another friend had a test at CityMD in New York, after she had a serious bout of respiratory illness. The test came back negative — and she said a friend in the medical profession ridiculed her for seeking a test.

So, after a long time when no one could get tested, now every doctor’s office and a number of national labs have begun to offer these tests. See details here.  But at many of these medical offices, the offer comes with a warning.

It’s logical to ask: why is my medical group offering the test if it does not tell me anything? Why are reputable companies like Quest and Labcorp, national testing giants, offering the test if it isn’t accurate?

The results are not clear or definitive

Most have language about how the results are not clear.

CityMD: “Serum Antibody IgG (Blood Test): Regardless of your results, you should continue to exercise universal precautions such as social distancing, quarantining, frequent hand washing, wearing of a mask or face cloth in public, and other CDC guideline recommendations. Remember, COVID-19 is a new infection, and it is unclear if a positive antibody definitively offers immunity.” CityMD uses the Abbott test. In New York City, testing is free.

Labcorp says: “Your test results may help identify if you were exposed to the virus that causes COVID-19 and, if so, whether or not your body has developed antibodies. Although having antibodies usually gives immunity from further infection, there is not enough evidence at this time to suggest that people who have antibodies against SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19, are protected against future infections from the virus. Results from this test also will not provide information on whether you can spread the virus to others and is not used as a basis for diagnosis.” It also notes that false positives are possible.

Why do so many people want tests if the results are not actionable?

People want certainty, especially here in New York in pandemic central.   Also, the nationwide test shortage has meant that people want tests more than ever — a respiratory test or an antibody test.

My thoughts when I got a positive test included: “Yay, I’m home free! I will volunteer for all the trials I can volunteer for, and share my antibodies and genes with anybody!”

But I’m not immune. Also, there’s that one negative test …

According to human nature, we lust for the test — conveniently skipping by the fact that the test seems at this point to be 1) not reliable, whatever test it is, and 2) not proof of immunity.

So why get this test? Why not focus on the things we know are working: Stay home. Wear a mask. Wash hands. Be careful until you know things have changed.

Questions you might have

Should I get a test? Ask your doctor.

No really, should I? What are your reasons for wanting a test? If you want a certain answer about whether you had it or have it, you might not get that. If you’re asking to be given permission to leave self-isolation, do not use these tests for that purpose.

I hear there are two kinds of test — one for active infection and one for the presence of antibodies, which suggests immunities. Can you explain?  The one for active infection is usually done with a swab stuck into your nose or elsewhere in the respiratory tract, and the resulting sample is tested at a lab. Another kind of testing is now being done, serological (blood) testing for the presence of antibodies to the virus.

My work needs me to have a test. What should I do? Ask them why — the truth is that these tests do have errors. Better ones may be on the way. In any case, most scientists will say you should not base your personal behavior on these tests. Also ask your employer what test they need — the one for active infection, or the one for antibodies. Also ask: Will you pay? How do you want me to show you the results? Can you give me written, detailed instructions? Many workplaces have a hard time understanding these subtleties.

I need to have a test to get my sick pay for the days off I took for what I believe to have been coronavirus. My employer requires this before I can get my pay. See above on employers.

I need to get tested to know if I can go see my elderly mom (immunocompromised brother) etc. What should I do? Again, these tests are not going to prove that you are immune or not able to give the virus to someone else. The tests are not that reliable. Remember, the virus can be passed on not just through breathing but also by taking virus particles from, say, a doorknob and delivering them with your mom’s groceries. Stay safe.

My son tested positive on the respiratory test this spring, but now he needs a negative test to volunteer. What should I do? I believe in this scenario, the volunteer organization is looking for a swab or nasal test to confirm that he has no active viruses in his system. Confirm with the volunteer organization, and ask them for detailed, specific instructions in writing. (The nasal test also has a lot of errors.)

My son tested positive this spring, and now he wants to give plasma. What should I do? I believe in this scenario, the organization is looking for presence of antibodies to confirm that he had exposure to the virus in the past. Confirm with the organization, and ask them for detailed, specific instructions. Also, here’s a list of plasma donation and other studies. If you sign up, they’ll get in touch if you fit their criteria.

My doctor said the test was approved by the FDA. Doesn’t that make his test the best? The FDA approval process has been sorely lacking. Read here.  The underlying scientific data on test performance is here.  But remember, these are self-reported to the FDA and there hasn’t been enough time to really confirm performance.

My doctor’s office is offering the test, so isn’t that safe? It depends on what you think of as safe. Again, the results are unreliable, and most doctors will tell you that you should not use the test results to make decisions about where to go and what to do.

My doctor’s offering the test, but his nurse said don’t get it. What should I do? Think carefully about what you expect to gain from a test. Remember, they’re not all that accurate, and results shouldn’t be used to govern personal behavior — a positive antibody test is not a free pass to leave isolation.

I never tested positive but I know I had it. Should I get tested? We’re not doctors. But since we know a little about the reliability of the tests, we suggest that you think carefully about why you want to get tested.

I want one of these “immunity passport” things I’m reading about, certifying that I had it and I’m now safe. What should I do? The “immunity passport” idea has been discarded. First, the tests aren’t that accurate, and second, even if they do confirm that you have antibodies, no one knows whether those antibodies will protect you from another infection.

Some tests are better than others, I hear. I want the best one. What is it? There are a lot of people out there selling tests that have not been authorized by the FDA. Scammers will find ways to scam people. What’s the best one? The science is still out on this one, but Michael Osterholm, a well-respected scientist who runs a center studying pandemics at the University of Minnesota, said he thinks the best one is being used by Mount Sinai Medical Center in New York City. It’s a two-step process, he said. The Mount Sinai test is not commercially available; scientists there are using that test to qualify potential donors for a convalescent plasma trial.

Wait, there’s an at-home test! Why shouldn’t I use that? At this point the FDA has not authorized any at-home tests. There are a lot of people trying to make money on coronavirus testing, so you should be cautious. For example, LetsGetChecked.com is promising an at-home test. They don’t have one now. They just raised a ton of money, $71 million to be exact. Would you choose them to test you? Why?

 

If it’s not about testing, what is it about? Scientists say testing is an important element of dealing with the pandemic. But other important elements should not be disregarded: Tracing the contacts of infected people, social distancing, hand-washing, mask-wearing, responsible conduct in general.