Abstract

BackgroundEarly in the pandemic, inadequate SARS-CoV-2 testing limited understanding of transmission. Chief among barriers to large-scale testing was unknown feasibility, particularly in non-urban areas. Our objective was to report methods of high-volume, comprehensive SARS-CoV-2 testing, offering one model to augment disease surveillance in a rural community.MethodsA community-university partnership created an operational site used to test most residents of Bolinas, California regardless of symptoms in 4 days (April 20th – April 23rd, 2020). Prior to testing, key preparatory elements included community mobilization, pre-registration, volunteer recruitment, and data management. On day of testing, participants were directed to a testing lane after site entry. An administrator viewed the lane-specific queue and pre-prepared test kits, linked to participants’ records. Medical personnel performed sample collection, which included finger prick with blood collection to run laboratory-based antibody testing and respiratory specimen collection for polymerase chain reaction (PCR).ResultsUsing this 4-lane model, 1,840 participants were tested in 4 days. A median of 57 participants (IQR 47–67) were tested hourly. The fewest participants were tested on day 1 (n = 338 participants), an intentionally lower volume day, increasing to n = 571 participants on day 4. The number of testing teams was also increased to two per lane to allow simultaneous testing of multiple participants on days 2–4. Consistent staffing on all days helped optimize proficiency, and strong community partnership was essential from planning through execution.ConclusionsHigh-volume ascertainment of SARS-CoV-2 prevalence by PCR and antibody testing was feasible when conducted in a community-led, drive-through model in a non-urban area.

Highlights

  • IntroductionInadequate SARS-CoV-2 testing limited understanding of transmission

  • In the pandemic, inadequate SARS-CoV-2 testing limited understanding of transmission

  • The town of Bolinas, California is a coastal town in rural Northern California with a high proportion of elderly residents [6]; early in the pandemic, community leaders were eager to develop university partnerships in order to increase access to SARS-CoV-2 testing

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Summary

Introduction

Inadequate SARS-CoV-2 testing limited understanding of transmission. Our objective was to report methods of high-volume, comprehensive SARS-CoV-2 testing, offering one model to augment disease surveillance in a rural community. With clear evidence of asymptomatic infection [1] but minimal systematic active surveillance across larger communities, additional efforts to conduct largescale testing were needed to understand the breadth of COVID-19 disease. Our objective was to describe the procedures and methodology we used to perform safe, high volume comprehensive testing for SARS-CoV-2 in a non-urban community. To our knowledge, this was the first effort to execute universal PCR and antibody testing for an entire town. Comprehensive information about active and past infection, we offer this as one model to augment disease surveillance for rural or suburban populations

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