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Victoria Knight
By Victoria Knight June 10, 2021

Biden kept his promise to increase testing capacity, even as demand for testing drops

Before vaccinations were widely available, COVID-19 tests were considered one of the only tools to help control the spread of the coronavirus. 

That's why then-candidate Joe Biden promised during the 2020 presidential campaign to boost the U.S.'s COVID-19 testing capacity as one of the ways that he would "beat COVID-19."  

Specifically, Biden's campaign website promised that, if elected, he would "double the number of drive-through testing sites" and "invest in next-generation testing, including at-home tests and instant tests, so we can scale up our testing capacity by orders of magnitude." 

Now that President Joe Biden has been in office for almost five months, we wondered how he has done? Experts say testing capacity has improved. At the same time, testing demand has decreased and part of Biden's promise — doubling the number of drive-thru testing sites — is harder to pin down. 

In February, about a month after Biden took office, his administration announced at a news briefing that it would invest more than $1.6 billion into COVID-19 testing. These funds would, among other things, expand testing in schools and other congregate settings, increase domestic manufacturing of testing supplies and help track new COVID-19 variants via genetic sequencing. 

Then, Biden's American Rescue Plan, which was successfully passed through both chambers of Congress in March, also allocated funds specifically to expand COVID-19 testing. 

On March 17, the Department of Health and Human Services announced that $10 billion from that legislation would be devoted to screening and testing so schools could reopen, and $2.25 billion to scaling up testing in underserved populations as well as providing new guidance. Another $4.8 billion was allotted in May to reimburse health care providers for testing uninsured individuals for COVID-19. 

Dr. Marcus Plescia, chief medical officer of the Association of State and Territorial Health Officials, the organization representing state public health agencies, said that states have begun to receive their American Rescue Plan funds and are starting to plan how testing will be implemented to help schools conduct classes in-person in the fall. 

But whether Biden was successful in doubling the number of drive-thru testing sites is unclear. KHN and PolitiFact asked various testing experts for their take, and they generally said they weren't aware of any data that showed the number of testing sites had doubled. Some hypothesized, though, that this may have been because many public health resources were shifted away from testing sites to staff and to set up vaccination sites once COVID-19 vaccines became available to the public. 

"I think states did shift their efforts to vaccination, because that was the move in the spring," said Plescia. But as more people were vaccinated, demand dropped and "if we had those drive-thru testing sites we ended up closing them," he added. "It was a promise we ended up not needing to keep."

Indeed, there have been reports of shuttered testing sites across the U.S. In Florida all 27 state-run testing sites closed at the end of May. Oklahoma also recently closed a mass testing site once demand fell to less than 50 tests per day and, in late May, New Jersey closed the state's first outdoor testing site. 

The Johns Hopkins University Testing Tracker shows that testing demand in the U.S. has significantly dropped. In January, about 2 million tests were conducted in a day. In May, that number dropped to about 850,000. This reduction occurred at the same time the number of Americans getting vaccinated is rising and COVID-19 cases and deaths are dropping. 

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention also recently recommended that vaccinated people who have been exposed to someone with COVID-19 no longer need to be tested if asymptomatic, and that vaccinated people can be excluded from workplace testing in most instances. 

Still, Plescia thinks that if future outbreaks occur in certain areas and more tests are required, states would be able to scale up to meet the need. Especially because of the increased availability of at-home tests — another Biden focus.  

So far, the administration has contracted with several private companies to ensure the production and distribution of both rapid and at-home COVID-19 tests. 

Ellume, an Australian diagnostics company, was the first to receive an emergency use authorization from the Food and Drug Administration for an at-home COVID-19 test. In February, the Department of Defense announced it had awarded Ellume almost $232 million to build a U.S. factory and increase home-test production. The contract also includes the allocation of 8.5 million home tests to the federal government, which must be provided by the end of 2021. 

Abbott, another diagnostics company, received significant funds from the federal government for tests during both the Biden and Trump administrations. In March, HHS announced that Abbott had received a contract to deliver 50 million of its rapid point-of-care tests to long-term care facilities. 

Currently, five over-the-counter at-home tests have been authorized for emergency use by the FDA. In addition to the Ellume and Abbott tests, which provide results at home in 15 minutes, a LabCorp test is also available over the counter, but its results take 1 to 2 days to return. 

The increase in supply and decrease in demand could mean that some testing efforts originally envisioned by the Biden administration might not be rolled out, and the U.S. may never get to "orders-of-magnitude" increases in testing, Josh Michaud, associate director of global health policy at the Kaiser Family Foundation wrote in an email. 

Overall, though, despite the number of drive-thru or mass-testing sites now closed down, there is now a greater availability of COVID-19 tests. The Biden administration has also provided significant funding towards testing, even if some has been redirected

"In general I think testing is much better," wrote Jeffrey Schlegelmilch, director of the Columbia University National Center for Disaster Preparedness, in an email. "There are easier-to-access options, and the wait times seem to be much faster for results... There are also more resources available to state and local health departments to perform testing. So I would qualify this as a promise kept." 

So would we. We rate this a Promise Kept. 

Our Sources

Associated Press, "OU Health closing public coronavirus testing as demand drops," May 27, 2021

Bradenton Herald, "State-run COVID testing sites closing by May 28. Manatee, Sarasota sites to close Saturday," May 12, 2021

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Interim Public Health Recommendations for Fully Vaccinated People, May 28, 2021

CNBC, "Biden administration to invest over $1.6 billion to expand Covid testing, sequencing," Feb. 17, 2021

CVS Health, "Over-the-counter COVID-19 testing now available at CVS Pharmacy," April 19, 2021

Department of Defense, DOD Awards $231.8 Million Contract to Ellume USA LLC to Increase Domestic Production Capacity and Deliver COVID-19 Home Tests, Feb. 1, 2021 

Department of Health and Human Services, Biden Administration Announces Actions to Expand COVID-19 Testing, Feb. 17, 2021

Department of Health and Human Services, Biden Administration to Invest More Than $12 Billion to Expand COVID-19 Testing, March 17, 2021

Department of Health and Human Services, HHS to Dedicate $4.8 Billion from American Rescue Plan to COVID-19 Testing for the Uninsured, May 25, 2021

Email exchange with Aly Morici, director of public affairs at Abbott, June 7, 2021

Email interview with Jeffrey Schlegelmilch, director of the Columbia University National Center for Disaster Preparedness, June 7, 2021

Email interview with Josh Michaud, associate director for global health policy at Kaiser Family Foundation, June 4, 2021

FierceBiotech.com, "CVS, Walgreens begin rolling out over-the-counter COVID tests from Abbott, Ellume and more," April 19, 2021

Food and Drug Administration, Coronavirus (COVID-19) Update: June 8, 2021, June 8, 2021

Healthline, "COVID-19 Rapid Tests Now Available at Pharmacies: What to Know," April 22, 2021

Johns Hopkins University Coronavirus Tracker, Daily State-by-State Testing Trends, Accessed June 8, 2021

Kaiser Health News, "Backed by Millions in Public and Private Cash, Rapid Covid Tests Are Coming to Stores Near You," April 1, 2021

Patch.com, "COVID-19 Testing Site Closes In Hoboken, After 60,000th Test," May 21, 2021

Phone interview with Gigi Gronvall, a senior scholar at the Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security at the Bloomberg School of Public Health, June 8, 2021

Phone interview with Dr. Marcus Plescia, chief medical officer of the Association for State and Territorial Health Officials, June 8, 2021

Phone interview with Dr. Leana Wen, visiting professor of health policy and management at the George Washington University, June 8, 2021

Politico, "Biden admin reroutes billions in emergency stockpile, Covid funds to border crunch," April 15, 2021

The Wayback Machine, JoeBiden.com/covid19/, Accessed June 9, 2021

The White House, Press Briefing by White House COVID-19 Response Team and Public Health Officials, Feb. 17, 2021

Victoria Knight
By Victoria Knight January 22, 2021

Biden establishes a national COVID testing board and lays out national strategy

Public health experts agree that one key to stopping the spread of the COVID-19 pandemic is significantly increasing testing.

President Joe Biden has said he will do so. In the run-up to his election, his campaign website promised he would "double the number of drive-through testing sites, invest in next-generation testing, including at home tests and instant tests, so we can scale up our testing capacity by orders of magnitude." The White House website now lists the same promises. 

Part of the reason widespread testing is important is because it could catch more asymptomatic cases of COVID-19. If those cases were caught early and individuals were able to isolate and stay home, that would prevent further transmission of the virus in communities. It could also identify hotspots across the country and allow local leaders to implement disease mitigation measures if necessary. 

"Being able to identify areas where it's transmitting more than others, this is really important for managing a national response," said Jeff Schlegelmilch, director of the National Center for Disaster Preparedness at Columbia University, in a Jan. 12 interview. 

Biden started making moves toward fulfilling his pledge to increase testing on Jan. 21 — his first full day in office — when he signed an executive order to establish a national pandemic testing board. The president likens this board to President Franklin D. Roosevelt's War Production Board that produced military supplies for World War II, including aircraft, tanks and firearms.

Jeff Zients, the White House's COVID-19 response coordinator, will chair the national pandemic testing board. Zients is an Obama-era official who oversaw fixing the government's rollout of healthcare.gov, the website for the Affordable Care Act's marketplace plans. 

The national pandemic testing board will coordinate the federal government's efforts to promote testing, and will provide recommendations to Biden on how the government can support states and territories in expanding testing. The board is also tasked with identifying any barriers to testing among priority populations, high-risk groups or communities that might be experiencing a test shortage. Biden's order also called for surveillance testing in schools to be supported by federal agencies. 

The order also says cabinet secretaries and the COVID-19 response coordinator will work towards making COVID-19 testing free for those who lack insurance. And for those who have insurance, the order designates these same entities to make sure tests are covered. 

Finally, the order established the creation of the U.S. Public Health Job Corps, which will train workers for jobs in testing, contact tracing and vaccination clinics. 

Another executive order Biden signed on Jan. 21 said his administration would use all legal authority, including the Defense Production Act, to assess and fill any supply shortfalls for testing, vaccination or PPE supplies.

These orders came down the same day the White House issued a national COVID-19 response plan, which included a section on mitigating spread through expanding testing. The plan said the federal government will increase the supply of rapid tests, enhance laboratory capacity and conduct better surveillance to watch for hotspots and COVID-19 variants. The Biden administration will also set up a testing support team at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention which will work to ensure tests are widely available, including at-home tests and rapid tests. 

These steps by the Biden administration to increase COVID-19 testing have the potential to make a substantial difference, said Jennifer Kates, director of global health & HIV policy at the Kaiser Family Foundation. (KHN is an editorially independent program of KFF). 

"What has been missing is a national strategy with the federal government leading on overseeing testing supply and access; instead, testing has been left up to the states," Kates wrote in an email. 

The challenging part now, Kates said, is figuring out what's going on with testing and where it's lagging in every state, city and county. 

"The next step is to get a handle on what is actually happening and quickly," Kates wrote. "They need to assess testing capacity across the country and be ready to help fix gaps and problems.  This is definitely the harder part!" 

While the Biden administration's release of plans and executive orders during his first week in office offer the beginning steps toward increasing COVID-19 testing, there is much more action that must actually be taken before those promises result in more testing across-the-board.

We rate this promise In the Works. 

 

Our Sources

Archived JoeBiden.com, COVID-19, Accessed Jan. 22, 2021

Email interview with Jennifer Kates, Director of Global Health & HIV Policy at the Kaiser Family Foundation, Jan. 22, 2021 

Phone interview with Jeff Schlegelmilch, Director of the National Center for Disaster Preparedness at Columbia University, Jan. 12, 2021

The White House, Priorities - COVID-19, Accessed Jan. 22, 2021 

The White House, National Strategy for the COVID-19 Response and Pandemic Preparedness, Jan. 21, 2021

The White House, Executive Order on Establishing the COVID-19 Pandemic Testing Board and Ensuring a Sustainable Public Health Workforce for COVID-19 and Other Biological Threats, Jan. 21, 2021

The White House, Executive Order on a Sustainable Public Health Supply Chain, Jan. 21, 2021

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