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State Launches Partnership to Provide Rapid, In Home COVID-19 Testing; Curfew Will be Extended

KSU freshman Thomas Jahnke is tested for COVID-19 in October at the KSU Center for Philanthropy and Alumni Engagement.
Kelly Krabill
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KSU Student Media
KSU freshman Thomas Jahnke is tested for COVID-19 in October at the KSU Center for Philanthropy and Alumni Engagement.

Ohio's public health departments are getting something Gov. Mike DeWine says they've wanted for a long time: rapid, in-home COVID-19 tests. DeWine today announced a partnership the state is entering withAbbott Labs and digital health care company, eMed to administer the rapid antigen tests. The state will spend $50 million CARES Act dollars for the tests. At $25 each, that will buy 2 million tests.

Abbott Labs will provide the tests and eMed personnel will offer live guidance to help people properly administer the test in their homes. Speaking during the governor's briefing, eMed CEO Dr. Patrice Harris, former president of the American Medical Association and a psychiatrist said, "People are anxious. They're perfectly willing and glad to do [a test] at home so they don't have to go anywhere, but they want to make sure they're performing the test correctly."

Harris said a person will log on to eMed's platform, which she described as being similar to Skype, and will be connected to one of their live guides to help them with administering the test. Results are available in 15 minutes.

DeWine said this type of testing will help local health departments tamp down outbreaks by administering tests quickly and implementing immediate contact tracing to limit spread.

Ohio Department of Health Medical Director Dr. Bruce Vanderhoff said these antigen tests, which originally were considered unreliable, have come a long way. "We have a very high degree of confidence now in a positive test result from these tests," he said. He indicated it's more likely that a false negative antigen test is incorrect. "False positives are extremely rare," he said.

Curfew to be extended

After some recent days of decline, case numbers, deaths, hospitalizations and ICU admissions are all up with 7,271 new confirmed and probable cases reported today and 109 deaths; 306 people entered the hospital in the last 24 hours and 35 were admitted to intensive care units.

"One out of four people in ICUs in the state of Ohio are there because of COVID-19," DeWine said. "Out of any 200 Ohioans, at least one has tested positive for COVID-19 in the past two weeks." The state's public health alert map shows 83 counties remain red, four are orange and one—Hamilton County—remains under the highest level, purple, for spread of COVID-19.

Because of that, the governor said he is extending the 10 p.m. to 5 a.m. curfew that was due to expire Jan. 23. "We're still in a very difficult time where we're trying to balance letting people make a living, do what they want to do but at the same time not let this get out control," DeWine said.

He did not say how long the curfew would be extended. DeWine said the way out of the pandemic is the vaccine, and the state continues to seek supply increases but at this point expects the same amount next week that it received this week.

Next week, Ohioans age 75 and up will be added to the group eligible to receive the vaccine. DeWine said if they get the supply, providers have indicated they have ample capacity to administer more shots and the state has identified 100 sites where they could administer vaccines at large scale.

DeWine began the briefing by showing people being vaccinated in Summit, Hamilton and Lawrence Counties. Evelyn Walker received the shot from Dr. Erika Sobolewski of Summit County Public Health. "I wanted to protect myself and others," she said.

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Summit County Public Health's Dr. Erika Sobolewski administers vaccines during Gov. Mike DeWine's coronavirus briefing on Thursday, Jan. 21, 2021.
/ via YouTube
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via YouTube
Summit County Public Health's Dr. Erika Sobolewski administers vaccines during Gov. Mike DeWine's coronavirus briefing on Thursday, Jan. 21, 2021.

A Northeast Ohio native, Sarah Taylor graduated from Miami University in Oxford, Ohio where she worked at her first NPR station, WMUB. She began her professional career at WCKY-AM in Cincinnati and spent two decades in television news, the bulk of them at WKBN in Youngstown (as Sarah Eisler). For the past three years, Sarah has taught a variety of courses in the School of Journalism and Mass Communication at Kent State, where she is also pursuing a Master’s degree. Sarah and her husband Scott, have two children. They live in Tallmadge.