COVID-19 testing may have to be scaled back in Alberta in the future experts
As the province transitions into a new stage of the pandemic, experts say COVID-19 testing may look different in the future, even though Alberta Health Services said it is status quo for now.
Right now, any Albertan with symptoms, who is a close contact or is connected to an outbreak can get tested for COVID-19 at assessment centres across the province.
But case counts have fallen dramatically over the last couple of months and the number of people who are vaccinated is on the rise, which may â" at some point â" force a rethink of how testing is done in the province.
âAt some point in time, we will have to scale back on that,â said Dr. Stephanie Smith, an infectious disease physician at the University of Alberta Hospital.
âIf we get into the fall and weâre not seeing significant numbers of people getting infected, or not seeing significant hospitalizations⦠then how disruptive do we want to be about testing people and having them in quarantine and that kind of thing if weâre not really seeing that severity of disease?â
Story continues below advertisement
Jason Kindrachuk, a Canada Research Chair in emergent viruses at the University of Manitoba, echoes the sentiment and said mass testing sites are not necessarily sustainable.
âWeâll scale those back but we still have to have the capacity to be able to do those diagnostics,â he said.
READ MORE: Alberta increasing access to COVID-19 rapid testing program
Kindrachuk said testing could evolve to where people go to their family doctor or a medical clinic to get tested if they are feeling unwell.
Trending Stories
Shocking selfie captures exact moment when lightning struck 3 siblings
Environment Canada confirms EF-2 tornado with 210 km/h winds touched down in Barrie
âIf you have a low enough number of cases, now you can actually focus on those cases very quickly â" those suspected cases â" and get those identified without seeing any further transmission,â he said.
Smith said COVID-19 may have to be managed like other respiratory viral illnesses, such as influenza.
âThat would probably be the way we should be going with COVID,â she said. âIf youâre ill with respiratory viral symptoms, then you should stay home (but) wouldnât necessarily need testing, and thatâs what happens in the community.â
âIn the hospital setting, if people come in with any kind of respiratory viral symptoms, then we do a test that has a whole panel of respiratory viruses,â Smith said, adding the main reason that is done is so patients can be appropriately isolated if need be.
Story continues below advertisement
READ MORE: Alberta resumes testing all positive COVID-19 cases for variants as concern grows over B.1.617
There have been concerns about variants of concern in Alberta. All positive cases are again being screened for variants of concern after a hiatus during the third wave due to high case counts.
Kindrachuk said while testing may evolve, it will be important to continue sequencing and identifying new variants.
âI think thereâs a little bit of a black-and-white with this and trying to figure out exactly how much can we scale back, how limited does that make us in terms of our ability to identify these variants and where is that grey area in between where we find that nice, comfortable threshold?â he said.
âThe bigger question is going to be in those communities across the globe that right now are being hit very hard, so many resource-limited settings. How do we ensure theyâre able to continue to do surveillance and do widespread screening?â
READ MORE: Alberta doctors cautiously optimistic 2 weeks after nearly all COVID-19 restrictions lifted
In a statement to Global News, AHS said it will continue to offer testing to anyone with symptoms as it monitors the impact of moving into the third and final stage of reopening.
Story continues below advertisement
âAt this time, there are no changes to the current testing strategy; we will continue to use our current service delivery model,â the statement reads.
âIf numbers surge, we increase capacity. If numbers continue to drop, we work with staff to support other areas of the response.â
View link »© 2021 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.
0 Response to "COVID-19 testing may have to be scaled back in Alberta in the future experts"
Post a Comment