Minnesota reported its busiest stretch of COVID-19 diagnostic testing ever last week, but health leaders warned of delays in results because of national supply shortages that have temporarily reduced the state's daily testing capacity.
Mayo Clinic's national reference lab in Rochester is down to about 11,000 COVID-19 tests per day from a capacity of about 20,000, though it is prioritizing Minnesota samples, and HealthPartners' daily capacity has dropped from 2,000 to as low as 1,200.
Delayed results are frustrating for people waiting to find out if they're infected and have exposed others, or if their employers won't let them work without a rule-out test, but they are unavoidable right now, said Dr. Mark Sannes, a HealthPartners infectious disease specialist.
"As the burden of COVID-19 has really ramped up across the southern United States, the consumption of testing reagents has ramped up with it," he said. "There really is a finite supply of that nationwide. ... We are not able to get everything we're asking for."
Providers are taking steps to increase capacity and minimize wait times. The University of Minnesota recently gained accreditation for its veterinary diagnostic lab — one of the largest in the nation — to test COVID-19 samples. It can now perform 180 human COVID-19 tests per day.
Mayo switched to heavier use of its in-house COVID-19 test, which is slower but isn't as reliant on equipment that is in short supply. Waits that were 72 to 96 hours two weeks ago are now down to 24 to 48 hours in many cases.
Officials with the Minnesota Department of Health are monitoring the delays closely, because they can hinder the state's ability to track the spread of the COVID-19 outbreak and warn people of their infections before they expose others.
"That concerns us deeply," said state Health Commissioner Jan Malcolm, "because it does compromise our ability to help people isolate and quarantine quickly enough to have the full effect on mitigating the spread."