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51ԹϺ Davis Health Joins State on Testing

Quick Summary

  • Gov. Newsom announces collaboration with 51ԹϺ Davis and 51ԹϺ San Diego to establish high-throughput testing hubs
  • 51ԹϺ Davis capacity: about 400 tests daily, with near-term plan to expand to some 1,000 tests per day and possibly more
  • 51ԹϺ Health now posting a daily dashboard with testing volume and results from all five 51ԹϺ medical centers

After steadily increasing its own coronavirus testing capacity, 51ԹϺ Davis Health is now collaborating with the state to quickly and significantly boost California’s testing capacity, as announced Saturday (April 4) by Gov. Gavin Newsom.

Dean Allison Brashear of the 51ԹϺ Davis School of Medicine said the university “is pleased to partner with Gov. Newsom on this important effort to increase testing capacity for Northern Californians.”

“The experts in our medical school’s Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine and other disciplines have worked together to enable 51ԹϺ Davis School of Medicine to contribute meaningfully to the governor’s priorities and the public health needs of the state.”

Newsom made the announcement at a coronavirus briefing where he also said he had established a COVID-19 Testing Task Force. Nam Tran, associate professor of pathology and laboratory medicine and senior director of clinical pathology in charge of COVID-19 testing at 51ԹϺ Davis Health, represents 51ԹϺ Davis on the task force.

The governor announced testing collaborations with the following:

  • 51ԹϺ Davis Health and 51ԹϺ San Diego Health, to establish high throughput testing hubs.
  • Stanford Medicine, as it launches the first serology test invented in California.
  • Abbott Laboratories, to deploy the first rapid point-of-care test across 13 health care delivery systems and 75 sites.

The governor also announced the launch of a new website, , to get critical medical supplies to the front lines of California’s fight against COVID-19. The website allows individuals and companies to donate, sell or offer to manufacture 13 of the most essential medical supplies, including ventilators, N95 respirators and testing materials.

“These actions marshal the generosity and innovative spirit of Californians to help us achieve two essential goals: getting more lifesaving supplies into our health care system and increasing our testing capacity,” Newsom said.

400 tests a day

51ԹϺ Davis Health began expanding testing capacity in December and, as of April 6, had the capacity to run about 400 tests daily, with same-day results for 51ԹϺ Davis patients. The Clinical Laboratory plans to expand into a high-volume testing hub shortly, to run some 1,000 tests per day, and possibly more, with the necessary reagents for test processing.

Priority for coronavirus testing is usually given to people who are in close contact with someone with COVID-19, develop symptoms of COVID-19 or reside in a “hot spot” community that has ongoing spread of infection.

People who meet these criteria are encouraged to call their health care providers to discuss their symptoms and exposure. Medical providers are equipped to best determine who needs the test. There is no treatment for COVID-19 and people who are mildly ill may be able to isolate and care for themselves at home.

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Testing across 51ԹϺ

51ԹϺ HEALTH DASHBOARD

COVID-19 testing chart (bar graph), cropped

This is one of three charts comprising the (where the charts pop up larger).

Look for daily updates on the Twitter page.

Monday (April 6), 51ԹϺ Health began distributing a dashboard to be updated daily with data on SARS-CoV-2 testing volume, the number of positive tests and age distribution of confirmed cases gathered from its five medical centers across the state.

Led by Atul Butte, chief data scientist and the director of 51ԹϺ Health’s Center for Data-Driven Insights and Innovation, or CDI2, the dashboard unifies testing information on patients at each of 51ԹϺ’s academic health centers — 51ԹϺ Davis, 51ԹϺ Irvine, 51ԹϺLA, 51ԹϺ San Diego and 51ԹϺ San Francisco — as well as externally performed tests for 51ԹϺ patients.

The high-level dashboard will help the university, and state and federal officials understand the rate of increase in cases and geographic spread in near real time, to aid in decision making and planning.

Carrie L. Byington, an infectious disease expert who serves as executive vice president of 51ԹϺ Health, said: “Real-time data is critical to the practice of medicine today. By drawing on our deep and knowledgeable data science experts across the university we are able to rapidly build and launch this reporting tool. It is critical information to create transparency on key pandemic-related trends in the state.

“We’re uniquely positioned with our academic health centers located across the state to give public health and elected officials the visibility they need for responding to this pandemic.”

Media Resources

Dateline Staff, 530-752-6556, dateline@ucdavis.edu

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