White House releases coronavirus testing strategy – and claims most of its work is done

FAN Editor

WASHINGTON  – The Trump administration unveiled a new strategy Monday to help states ramp up their capacity to test for coronavirus, claiming most of its work is done, according to new documents.

The two documents obtained by NBC News include a testing “overview” and a testing “blueprint.”

The first document, the testing overview, largely serves as a defense of the administration’s widely criticized handling of the coronavirus testing since the start of the epidemic. It outlines eight responsibilities that it says belong to the federal government, and claims to have already completed seven of these.

The other document, a testing “blueprint,” describes what it calls a “partnership” between states, the federal government and the private sector. The partnership it describes leaves the lion’s share of responsibility for funding, designing and executing a coronavirus testing plan to individual states. 

But states have repeatedly called for the federal government to shoulder the bulk of the responsibility for testing and tracing future coronavirus infections, arguing that they lack the funding and the expertise the federal government possesses.

Trump is also expected to announce Monday that the federal government is prepared to send all 50 states enough tests and testing materials to screen at least 2% of the population of each state per month. The Wall Street Journal first reported on the new federal testing efforts.

Trump is expected to formally announce the new plan at a Rose Garden news conference Monday afternoon. He told reporters during an Oval Office briefing earlier Monday that the plan is aimed at expanding testing particularly in African American and Hispanic communities.

The ability to repeatedly and widely test at-risk populations is the cornerstone of any responsible plan to reopen the nation’s economy. The president has called on states to lift stay-at-home orders and reopen, but most governors still think it is too early. 

Trump’s critics have zeroed in on the nationwide shortages of effective coronavirus tests, testing supplies, and labs able to process test results as a central failure of the federal government’s response to the deadly pandemic.

Trump has angrily rejected this criticism, however. “States, not the Federal Government, should be doing the Testing,” he said in a tweet last week.

Monday’s new documents underscore the limited role Trump wants the federal government to take in expanding testing, despite their repeated mentions of “partnering” with states. 

As several states formally begin reopening this week, the ongoing lack of testing capabilities is one of the key factors keeping many families, employers and institutions from resuming business as usual, even though stay-at-home orders have officially been lifted.

Health experts warn that the virus is likely to persist through the fall and winter, when flu season normally begins.

Testing 2% of people in each state monthly would be a major jump – roughly 1.6% of the U.S. population has been tested in total so far, according to the Covid Tracking Project.

Yet some experts say America needs to perform closer to 20 million to 30 million tests a day, to begin getting the economy back to normal.

There are more confirmed cases of Covid-19 in the United States than in any other country: More than 972,900 infections and at least 55,118 deaths have been confirmed, according to data from Johns Hopkins University.

The outbreak, which originated about four months ago near the city of Wuhan in China’s Hubei province, has prompted U.S. states to impose strict social distancing policies in an attempt to slow the spread of the disease. Those rules — closing nonessential businesses and ordering residents to stay home — have led to a devastating economic rout.

This is breaking news. Please check back for updates.

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