Long wait for COVID-19 test results frustrating families

Long wait for COVID-19 test results frustrating families

Families in Ottawa say the long wait for COVID-19 test results is placing an undue burden on them as they're forced to stay home from work and school.

Caroline Bicker went to a pop-up drive-thru testing site at the Canadian Tire Centre on Sunday after she and her two-year-old son developed sniffles. She waited five hours for a test, and on Thursday said she still hadn't received the results.

In the meantime she's had to stay home from her full-time job, and their symptoms have since disappeared.

"My son's completely healthy, sitting at home with tons of energy to run around and do something," she said. "I've lost essentially a week of work."

54,000 samples to process

As of Thursday, the province's network of labs is was processing nearly 54,000 test samples, the greatest volume since the pandemic began.

If you don't have enough testing and if we can't do contact tracing, then we have difficulties controlling the outbreak. - Doug Manuel, Ottawa Hospital Research Institute

A statement from the Eastern Ontario Regional Laboratory Association said priority is placed on hospital patients, so samples from assessment centres like the one Bicker visited could take three days or longer to process and issue results.

As a result, many Ontarians are reporting waits of five days or longer. In Quebec, officials estimate the wait at five to seven days.

Doug Manuel, a senior scientist with the Ottawa Hospital Research Institute, said those long delays are cause for concern on two levels: First, they make contact tracing even more difficult because of the time that elapses.

"If you don't have enough testing and if we can't do contact tracing, then we have difficulties controlling the outbreak," Manuel said.

Submitted by Doug Manuel
Submitted by Doug Manuel

Second, Manuel said the lag places an undue burden on the families left waiting for answers, many of whom are missing work and experiencing anxiety.

"There's a lot of burden on people if they can't get [their test results]," he said.

Parents left in the lurch

Julie Douglas had her three children tested over the weekend because they were all displaying symptoms. She said her two daughters have received their negative results, but the family is still waiting on her son's.

In the meantime Douglas, who normally works from home, has had to look after her kids because they can't go to school.

"That's the biggest thing, it's trying to to be both mom and employee in the work day," she said. "Which one takes precedence?"

On Thursday, Ontario Premier Doug Ford announced more than $1 billion to expand testing to cover contact tracing and case management, lab capacity and more testing centres.

The province is also trying to lighten the load on the labs by limiting testing to those who are showing symptoms, or who have been in close contact with someone who's tested positive. That's in line with criteria announced by Ottawa Public Health last week.