TOPEKA — The state of Kansas signed 11 contracts with University of Kansas Health System, Wichita State University and a collection of businesses to implement robust statewide expansion of COVID-19 testing to more rapidly identify and isolate infected people.
Gov. Laura Kelly said each would contribute to a more coordinated testing strategy starting next week that was based on assigned responsibility for testing in specific populations and counties. The project is financed with approximately $45 million in federal funding.
“Kansas is at a critical point with COVID-19,” the governor said. “Until a vaccine is widely available, one of the most important strategies to protect Kansans and ensure a promising economy is to increase testing.”
The unified testing strategy endorsed by Kelly and legislators on the State Finance Council envisions broader routine screening of Kansans and better coordination of public and private testing activity.
The plan required access to additional testing supplies, transportation resources and laboratory capacity. The goal is to get test results to people within 48 hours so they could be promptly isolated.
The state entered contracts with Freestate Logistics, Clinical Reference Labs, MAWD Pathology Group, Quest Dynamics, Sinochips Diagnostics, NICUSA, Well Health, 4M, KU Health Systems and WSU. The value of the agreements wasn’t released by the governor’s office.
“When combined with wearing face masks, extensive testing — along with isolating those who are positive and quarantining close contacts — poses the most probable fighting opportunity to stop the COVID-19 pandemic, especially as we head into the winter months,” said Lee Norman, secretary of the Kansas Department of Health and Environment.
A pair of Kansas counties with a combined 300,000 residents moved to shrink the size of public gatherings Friday and reinforce wearing of masks as the state’s major teaching hospital began postponing elective surgeries and turned away more patients due to rapid community spread of COVID-19.
Shawnee County’s emergency health order sought to answer the coronavirus surge by reducing to 10 the maximum number of people allowed at mass gatherings. Slashing of the previous 25-person cap until Dec. 14 was paired with a new rule holding restaurants to the standard already imposed on bars limiting customers to 50% of total.
In addition, the county said the maximum number of people at weddings and other private events would be cut to 100 from the previous 500-person barrier. The order also urged employers to allow personnel to work remotely from home if feasible.
Gianfranco Pezzino, the Shawnee County health officer, said changes were warranted in response to clear evidence of dramatic COVID-19 transmission. Incidence of coronavirus in the county had escalated from 345 two weeks ago to more than 600 in both of the past two weeks.
“The number of cases we are seeing every week is skyrocketing,” he said. “The only way out of this crisis is to reduce community transmission.”
In Douglas County, public health officers responded to comparable expansion of the caseload by tightening limits Friday on mass gatherings to no more than 15 people, down from the previous ceiling of 45. The county is maintaining a mask mandate applicable to people older than 5 in all indoor public spaces, except when eating, drinking, swimming for if dealing with a medical obstacle.
The eastern Kansas county anchored by Lawrence reported a spike to 13.8% in COVID-19 positivity, which was three times the October rate. There’s been a surge in the daily number of new cases to 44, up substantially from 17 cases per day in October.
“We believe this spike is due to people letting their guards down with lapses in mask wearing, attending social gatherings that allow for transmission of COVID-19 and people who are experiencing symptoms being out in the public instead of self-isolating to reduce the chances for exposing others,” said Tom Marcellino, a Douglas County health officer.
He said it was essential people recommit hemselves to fundamentals of wearing a mask, social distancing and personal hygiene.






