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News / Health / Health Wire

Contact tracing takes a back seat

Health investigators can’t keep up with surge of infections

By MICHELLE L. PRICE, Associated Press
Published: August 28, 2021, 2:04pm
2 Photos
Salt Lake County Health Department public health nurse Lee Cherie Booth points May 11, 2020, to a board showing a hypothetical case that serves as a training tool to teach new contact tracers how to track all the people they need to reach out to after a person tests positive for the new coronavirus.
Salt Lake County Health Department public health nurse Lee Cherie Booth points May 11, 2020, to a board showing a hypothetical case that serves as a training tool to teach new contact tracers how to track all the people they need to reach out to after a person tests positive for the new coronavirus. (Rick Bowmer/Associated Press) Photo Gallery

Health investigators across the U.S. are finding it nearly impossible to keep up with the deluge of new COVID-19 infections and carry out contact-tracing efforts that were once seen as a pillar of the nation’s pandemic response.

States are hiring new staff and seeking out volunteers to bolster the ranks of contact tracers who have been overwhelmed by surging coronavirus cases.

Some states trimmed their contact-tracing teams this spring and summer when virus numbers were dropping and are now scrambling to train new investigators. Others have triaged their teams to focus on the most vulnerable, such as cases involving schools or children too young to be vaccinated.

Texas got out of the business entirely, with the new two-year state budget that takes effect Sept. 1 explicitly prohibiting funds being used for contact tracing. That left it up to local health officials, but they can’t keep up at a time when Texas is averaging more than 16,000 new cases a day.

Mississippi has 150 staff working full time to identify people who have had close contact with an infected person, but they are swamped, too.

“A lot of times, by the time cases are reported, transmission has already occurred,” state epidemiologist Dr. Paul Byers said.

Since the pandemic began, states have been relying on the practice of contact tracing to track down, notify and monitor those who were exposed to someone who tested positive for the coronavirus.

Dr. Yvonne Maldonado, a professor of global health and infectious diseases at the Stanford University School of Medicine, said that while contact tracing can be time-intensive, especially if one person potentially exposed a lot of people, “it does in the end prevent additional cases.”

Maldonado said it’s a “staple of public health” and can be the only way someone can find out a stranger may have exposed them to the disease.

The contact-tracing response has varied from state to state throughout the pandemic.

New York has adjusted its contract-tracing staff with the pandemic’s waves. The state had more than 8,000 contract tracers in February and March of this year but now has 3,860 staff working on contract tracing. That does not include New York City, which has its own $600 million tracing initiative with thousands of staff.

Arkansas has hired two outside firms, General Dynamics Information Technology and Arkansas Foundation for Medical Care, to handle the investigations for the state. The firms have about 257 people working right now and are each trying to add about 100 more.

In Louisiana, another virus hotspot, state officials have added 130 people in recent weeks to their staff working on contact tracing. They now have more than 560 people working on it.

In Idaho, a new public health website, Volunteer-Idaho.com, encourages people with health care skills or a simple willingness to volunteer to join the state’s Medical Reserve Corps.

Health officials say they’re not able to track every case and instead try to focus on infections that could have exposed large numbers of people or vulnerable groups.

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