Massachusetts finds low positivity rate in school pooled testing
BOSTON (AP) — Massachusetts’ pooled COVID-19 testing program for the state’s schools has tested nearly 159,000 people and found a positivity rate of lower than 1%, state officials said Monday.
Under the program, which started last month, teachers, staffers and students in groups of up to 10 are tested. The swabs are then placed in a single tube and shipped to a lab for testing. If the tube is tested and comes back negative, every person in that pool is presumed to be negative for COVID-19.
But because the average pool included seven people, individual prevalence among those tested is well below that number. State officials said it showed there is extremely little evidence of in-school transmission of COVID-19 in Massachusetts.
If the test for a tube comes back positive, the people are tested individually and once positive individuals are identified, they must follow isolation guidelines, while their close contacts must quarantine.
“The science is clear that it is safe for kids to be in the classrooms, and this initiative has proved to serve as an invaluable tool for schools throughout the Commonwealth as they return to in-person learning,” Gov. Charlie Baker said in a statement.
The state also announced that it will cover the cost of pooled testing through the end of the school year.
The science is clear that it is safe for kids to be in the classrooms, and as communities and districts continue the return to in-person learning, this program will remain an important tool for local schools.
🏫 MORE: https://t.co/UJKPBdSImz
— Charlie Baker (@MAGovArchive) March 29, 2021
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