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What Next | Daily News and Analysis

The U.S. Can Fix Its COVID Testing Failures

What Next | Daily News and Analysis

Slate Podcasts

Daily News, News, News Commentary

4.32.4K Ratings

🗓️ 25 August 2020

⏱️ 17 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Getting tested for the coronavirus has never been as easy as it should be in the U.S. We’ve seen equipment shortages, long delays for test results, and even mixed messages about who should be getting tested. But there is a way to fix America’s inadequate testing. And experts say it could return some normalcy even before we have a reliable vaccine. Guest: Robinson Meyer, a staff writer at The Atlantic. Read his latest story, The Plan That Could Give Us Our Lives Back. Slate Plus members get bonus segments and ad-free podcast feeds. Sign up now. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Transcript

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0:00.0

In March, the president went into a lab and said, every American who wants a test for the

0:10.4

coronavirus can get one.

0:14.1

Was it true then?

0:25.3

It was definitely not true then.

0:28.1

This is Robinson Meyer, staff writer at The Atlantic.

0:31.7

We're talking in late August.

0:34.3

Is it true now?

0:36.2

So it's interesting now.

0:38.1

The country still definitely does not have enough tests.

0:42.4

And whenever there's a surge in cases, then everyone who wants a test is definitively

0:48.5

unable to get a test.

0:50.5

Normally Robinson covers climate change and technology.

0:54.3

Not like many of us, his attention this spring shifted to one thing, the pandemic.

1:00.1

He's written extensively about the testing shortages Americans have faced during this public

1:05.2

health crisis.

1:06.2

You know, we saw this in Arizona last month where not only were there not enough tests,

1:13.1

even to test everyone who was symptomatic, not only were there not enough tests to test

1:16.2

everyone who was asymptomatic and might have been exposed, there weren't enough test

1:20.4

to test doctors who were exposed or doctors who were symptomatic.

1:24.3

And what that meant was that healthcare workers, nurses, doctors who had been exposed

1:29.9

to the virus had to just sit at home and wait seven, ten days for a test to come back

1:36.3

while their offices basically were short staffed, you know, in the middle of the biggest

...

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