COVID-19 test result delays means many missed pay, work: union leader - Action News
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COVID-19 test result delays means many missed pay, work: union leader

Delays in getting results meant people made sacrifices and missed work, according to NAPE president Jerry Earle.

Thousands of tests flown out of N.L. for processing as provincial lab is over capacity

Jerry Earle is the president of NAPE, Newfoundland and Labrador's largest public-sector union. (Submitted by Jerry Earle)

The leader of the province's largest union says Newfoundland and Labrador's public health officials should apologize for leaving people in the dark about COVID-19 testing delays.

Jerry Earle, the president of the Newfoundland and Labrador Association of Public and Private Employees, said residents inside and outside his union were frustrated and concerned when their testresults were delayed for several days. He saidsome havemade big sacrifices as they were forced to self-isolatelonger whiletheir tests were flown out of province.

"It's financially impacted some people. We have people in this province that don't have paid sick leave," he said Tuesday.

"People were extremely concerned, people were frustrated, they were being adversely affected and they could have avoided all of that for a simple explanation 10 days ago."

Health Minister John Haggie revealed Monday that thousands of tests were flown out of the province, as testing demandin Newfoundland and Labrador outstripped capacity.

Haggieapologized to patients who faced excessive delays but said the provincialgovernment didn't know when the results would come in. He said they wereas transparent as possible given the circumstances.

Earle says health-care workers in the province knew "for some time" that tests were being shipped out, and said the province's top health officials could have saved a lot of heartache if they told the public what was happening.

"People would have understood it," he said. "It's just simple information sharing because people have enough stress on their plate right now across Newfoundland and Labrador."

Eastern Health, which operates the provincial public healthlab,said in a statement that it sent the first tests out of the province on Jan.5, but didn't immediately reply to followup questions about when those arrangements were made.

'Pure frustration'

Kate McLeod and her boyfriend, Aaron Lundrigan, were two people affected by the delayed results.Lundrigansays he was forced to use many of his sick days while he waited for answers.

Kate McLeod and her boyfriend, Aaron Lundrigan, were waiting six days for her COVID-19 test result. (Submitted by Kate McLeod)

McLeod started feeling some flu-like symptoms on New Year's Eve, but didn't have any known contact with a confirmed COVID-19 case. She was tested on Jan. 3, but didn't get her negative testresultuntil Sunday.

During that six-day period, she says she didn't go anywhere, and her boyfriend was in a state of limbo. If McLeod tested positive, he'd have to enter isolation as a close contact, but when the test result didn't come, he wasn't sure what to do.

"He can't work from home, and obviously because I was tested, he wasn't allowed to go to work. So he had to take four sick days, and that was super-annoying for us," McLeod said.

"After the 72 hours [of waiting] passed, it was just pure frustration, there's no other word really to describe it."

A surge of COVID-19 tests created a backlog at the public health lab in Newfoundland and Labrador, and as a result about 8,000 tests were sent to labs outside the province between Jan. 5 and Jan. 9. (Mario Tama/Getty Images)

Earle says he's heard from others who missed work because they needed to get a negative resultbefore they could leave isolation.

"I can only imagine from what I heard how broad this must have been," he said. "There certainly, probably, was hundreds upon hundreds of people affected, if not more."

Under current public health directives, negative tests are required for people toleave isolation if they'reconsidered a high-risk close contact and don't haveCOVID-19 symptoms.

The Department of Health did not respond immediately to questions about what individuals should do if they are still waiting for their result past their mandatory isolation period.

Read more from CBC Newfoundland and Labrador