Anecdotal, but I’ve lived in a few cities in the United States over the past few months, and testing still varies wildly:
In Los Angeles, during July and August, testing was great. I could get tested whenever I wanted, in a drive through test that never took more than 20 minutes. There were a ton of people getting tested, but the overall operation was efficient, so they were able to process a huge volume of cars (6 lanes, probably around 4 minutes per car) per day. I got tested > 5, < 15 times here.
In New York (Manhattan) things were not as easy. I’ve been able to do walk in testing at a lab, but it was a 2 hour wait. I’ve done this twice, and once left due to the wait. This is what is available to the general public. Note that I also get tested through work, and thats self service and reports are within 24 hours, but this is not available to the public. I’ve been tested >20 times for work, and only twice on my own.
In Montana, we could only get a COVID test if we were 1) prescribed one by the doctor and 2) scheduled an appointment before hand and 3) had an exposure or “reason” we were being tested.
Anecdotally I’d agree that testing demand greatly exceeds supply. A few key locations have matched their testing availability supply with the demand, but by and large the demand still exceeds it across the majority of the United States. I don’t think the public conscious still thinks of testing as in the early days (dont get tested unless you show symptoms) - most large metropolitan areas is now used to relatively frequent tests when available, and more rural places simply don’t have the same access to testing, so they don’t get tested unless they know they’ve been exposed.
Again, this is anecdotal and not grounded in facts or figures from objective sources. These are just my observations over >20 tests in the past 150 days.
Amazing how it differs by region. Here in the UK, anecdotally tests are pretty easy to come by and turned around rapidly—but are still restricted only to those with canonical COVID symptoms (fever/cough/change in sense of smell or taste).
Anecdotal, but I’ve lived in a few cities in the United States over the past few months, and testing still varies wildly:
In Los Angeles, during July and August, testing was great. I could get tested whenever I wanted, in a drive through test that never took more than 20 minutes. There were a ton of people getting tested, but the overall operation was efficient, so they were able to process a huge volume of cars (6 lanes, probably around 4 minutes per car) per day. I got tested > 5, < 15 times here.
In New York (Manhattan) things were not as easy. I’ve been able to do walk in testing at a lab, but it was a 2 hour wait. I’ve done this twice, and once left due to the wait. This is what is available to the general public. Note that I also get tested through work, and thats self service and reports are within 24 hours, but this is not available to the public. I’ve been tested >20 times for work, and only twice on my own.
In Montana, we could only get a COVID test if we were 1) prescribed one by the doctor and 2) scheduled an appointment before hand and 3) had an exposure or “reason” we were being tested.
Anecdotally I’d agree that testing demand greatly exceeds supply. A few key locations have matched their testing availability supply with the demand, but by and large the demand still exceeds it across the majority of the United States. I don’t think the public conscious still thinks of testing as in the early days (dont get tested unless you show symptoms) - most large metropolitan areas is now used to relatively frequent tests when available, and more rural places simply don’t have the same access to testing, so they don’t get tested unless they know they’ve been exposed.
Again, this is anecdotal and not grounded in facts or figures from objective sources. These are just my observations over >20 tests in the past 150 days.
Amazing how it differs by region. Here in the UK, anecdotally tests are pretty easy to come by and turned around rapidly—but are still restricted only to those with canonical COVID symptoms (fever/cough/change in sense of smell or taste).