Danny Katz
Executive Director, CoPIRG
Executive Director, CoPIRG
CoPIRG
Denver- At the time of year that many Americans usually start making holiday travel plans, the consumer advocacy group, CoPIRG, is launching the “Home for the Holidays” campaign. The campaign calls on Governor Polis to triple the amount of testing happening to ensure Colorado reaches the testing levels needed to suppress the novel coronavirus (COVID-19) so that people can gather more safely over the upcoming holidays.
“Most years, Americans celebrate the holidays with family and close friends. But this isn’t ‘most years.’ No one wants to get their parents or grandparents sick. The only way we can safely congregate is if everyone who needs a test, gets a test and if we follow basic health protocols like mask wearing,” said Danny Katz, CoPIRG’s director.
CoPIRG is urging people to sign a petition to the governor asking him to commit to hitting the testing target that the Brown School of Public Health and Harvard Global Health Institute say is necessary to effectively suppress the virus. That’s 3 times as much testing as Colorado is doing now. Governors should also commit to returning test results in 48 hours or less, which is the time frame health professionals say is important for preventing isolated incidents from becoming outbreaks.
Gov. Polis can follow the example of other states to achieve our goal. For example, Massachusetts has hit its testing target. Connecticut and Maine are also close to hitting their targets, with turnaround times of 48 hours or fewer for results.
“If we want to see our families for the holidays, attend religious services, or eat out at a restaurant without fear of contracting or spreading the virus, we need to dramatically increase the amount of testing we are doing in Colorado. Let’s make it happen,” said Katz.
The federal government announced recently that it plans to deliver 100 million rapid tests to states. That’s good, but nowhere near the testing capacity we need. It’s up to state governors to make it happen, and they can do so by borrowing best practices from successful states. Those include:
For a more in-depth analysis of what we need to have a semblance of a normal holiday season, check out this blog from CoPIRG’s national Public Health Campaigns Director Matt Wellington and Dr. Syra Madad, the senior director of the System-wide Special Pathogens Program at NYC Health & Hospitals.