As the country struggles to build enough temporary hospital beds
to accommodate the surge of coronavirus-related illness, a parallel rush
is on to set up sites to test for the virus.
Prime real estate for testing is under tents in large parking lots
adjacent to commercial properties, including retail but also office and
industrial.
Yet a boom of testing sites in the parking lots of the nation’s
largest retailers, which tend to be centrally located in densely
populated areas, hasn’t materialized. Out of a possible 30,000 sites,
there were only five up and running as of this week, the Department of
Health and Human Services confirmed to CNN.
In mid-March, when President Donald Trump declared a state of
emergency, the CEOs of Walmart, Walgreens, Target and CVS attended his
press conference in the Rose Garden and made statements about making
space available at their properties for public agencies to set up
temporary coronavirus testing locations. They didn’t offer a timetable
or other details about the effort.
The potential is large. Many of the 30,000 sites occupied by
mega-retailers are ringed by large parking lots. As of Tuesday, the five
open locations included two sites at Walmart stores in the outer edges
of metro Chicago focusing on seniors, healthcare workers and first
responders. There is also a site at a Walgreens in greater Chicago, a
CVS in Massachusetts and a Rite Aid in Philadelphia (Rite Add was not
represented at the presidential press conference).
The two Walmart sites in the Chicago area will help the company
better understand the operational, public health and safety
considerations associated with federal, state and local efforts to
expand access to mobile testing, a Walmart spokesperson told Bisnow on
Tuesday.
“We are in active conversations with several states to see how we
can best support their efforts to expand drive-thru testing,” the
spokesperson wrote in an email. “We don’t know where the next sites will
be, but we are speaking with multiple states to see how we can play a
role in supporting our communities at this unprecedented time.”
Walmart is also planning, in partnership with Quest Diagnostics, to
open a drive-through testing site in its hometown of Bentonville,
Arkansas, next week. Target, Walgreens and CVS didn’t respond to Bisnow
queries. On its website, Target asserts that it is committed to offering
its parking lots for coronavirus testing, but offers no details.
The need for testing is urgent, according to health authorities.
The United States now tops the world for coronavirus exposure, but not
for testing. As of Tuesday, more than 1.1 million Americans had been
tested for exposure, according to the COVID Tracking Project. That total
is more on an absolute basis than either South Korea or Italy, two
nations hard hit by the outbreak, but far fewer per capita.
Even at 1.1 million, that means about 330 for every 100,000
Americans have been tested, compared with more than twice that many in
either South Korea or Italy. As the need for testing is rising, the
equipment to do so is still in short supply, especially swabs to use in
test kits. The test themselves have been in short supply as well, and
while the Food and Drug Administration recently authorized the use of
rapid coronavirus tests from various manufacturers, it will take time to
roll them out, former executive director of the Council of State and
Territorial Epidemiologists Jeff Engel told Politico.
“As more testing becomes available, retail, industrial and sporting
complexes can all accommodate testing, especially their parking lots
for drive-thru testing,” JLL Healthcare Director of Compliance
Strategies Katherine Tolomeo said. The advantage of drive-thru sites in
larger parking lots is that they can handle large volumes of individuals
who may have more mild symptoms, or no symptoms at all, to help
decrease the traffic around healthcare facilities, Tolomeo said.
Parking lots used for Walmart Supercenters, SuperTargets and
now-empty stadiums are designed to handle large volumes of car traffic.
Also useful: paved land that is being used for nothing at all.
“We’ve seen vacant retail pad site locations be used for testing
facilities,” Transwestern Executive Managing Director-National
Healthcare Advisory Services Eric Johnson said. “In some cases, vacant
land has been used for this purpose as well, with tents and temporary
structures beings mobilized to support additional demand in patient
testing.”
One example is in upstate New York, where Mason Asset Management
and Namdar Realty Group have make the parking lot of The Shops at Ithaca
Mall in Ithaca available to be a COVID-19 drive-thru test site at no
charge. The real estate companies worked in conjunction with Cayuga
Medical Center and Tompkins County officials to set up the facility. In
addition to the test center, the American Red Cross used 18K SF of
vacant space at the mall for a blood drive last Thursday, at no charge
to the organization. The blood donation site was in a former Planet
Fitness.
“It’s our hope that by using our vacant space for these
initiatives, we’ll help to curb the spread of the virus in Ithaca and
the surrounding area,” said the mall’s general manager, Gina Speno.
Other testing sites have recently opened in mall parking lots, such
as at the Quaker Bridge Mall in Lawrence, New Jersey, opened by Mercer
County and area hospital systems; Northwood Centre in Tallahasse,
Florida, opened by Tallahassee Memorial Healthcare and other local
healthcare operations; and Bi-County Shopping Cetner in Farmingdale, New
York, operated by AFC Urgent Care Farmingdale. Testing sites are also
being set up near existing clinics, or at large public facilities, such
as Jacksonville’s TIAA Bank Field and Orlando’s Orange County Convention
Center.
Some testing sites are popping up in unexpected places. In
Maryland, the government announced the availability of drive-thru
testing at three Vehicle Emissions Inspection Program facilities around
the state. MedStar Health also set up a testing site at the Pauline Betz
Addie Tennis Center in Bethesda, Maryland. Testing sites are being set
up by state and local agencies, and by private companies. In Long
Island, ProHealth, a Riverhead urgent care clinic, set up a tent outside
its office for in-car testing. In Odessa, Texas, WestTex Urgent Care
has set up a similar operation. In both cases, the testing isn’t so much
drive-thru as drive-up. Those who come for testing make appointments
and call when they arrive. Clinic personnel then come out to collect the
necessary samples.
The speed with which testing sites are being opened is also
reportedly attracting coronavirus testing scams, which usually involve
bogus test kits but in at least one case, a pop-up site that may or may
not be real. In Louisville, police are investigating an organization
that set up pop-up coronavirus test sites on Tuesday and Wednesday,
charging $200 per test, the Courier Journal reports.
https://www.bisnow.com/national/news/retail/the-scramble-is-also-on-to-set-up-testing-facilities-103694
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