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Gov. Kemp Touts Augusta University COVID-19 Screening Application; DPH Partners with CDC on Antibody Testing Survey

Posted over 5 years ago by Charlotte Endemano

“Atlanta, GA - In a recent address to Georgians regarding COVID-19, Governor Brian P. Kemp applauded the launch of Augusta University's COVID-19 telemedicine app. Georgians can use this tool from their home to receive a virtual screening from a healthcare provider trained to screen for COVID-19. If the result is a positive screening, staff will contact the patient to schedule a test at one of Georgia's designated testing locations. Screening and testing are available at no cost.

"Increased, streamlined testing will be a cornerstone of our ability to safely reopen our state in the coming days, and I am grateful to President Keel and our partners at Augusta University for their innovative work to make this app available to all Georgians," said Governor Kemp. "This app enhances our testing capacity and reduces exposure for our doctors, nurses, and medical staff through at-home screening. We are encouraging symptomatic Georgians and those who feel that they were recently exposed to someone with COVID-19 to download the app this week and begin the screening process."

The AU Health ExpressCare app is free, user-friendly, and available twenty-four hours a day, seven days a week. Georgians can access the app by visiting augustahealth.org, downloading AU Health ExpressCare on their smartphone, or calling (706) 721-1852.

If you begin to display symptoms consistent with COVID-19 - day or night - you can log onto AU Health ExpressCare or call to get screened by a clinician. If you meet criteria for testing, staff will contact you to schedule a test at one of the state’s designated testing locations. Your healthcare information will be securely transmitted to your designated testing site. Once you arrive for your appointment, you will provide a specimen for testing. In roughly seventy-two hours, you will be able to access your test results via a secure patient portal, and a medical provider will contact you directly if you are positive.

Asymptomatic individuals who are first responders, law enforcement, healthcare workers, and residents and staff of long-term care facilities should call their local health department to arrange for a COVID-19 test.”

 

Georgia Department of Public Health Partners with CDC on Antibody Testing Survey

“Atlanta – The Georgia Department of Public Health (DPH) is partnering with Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and the Fulton and DeKalb County Boards of Health to conduct an antibody testing survey to better understand how many people may have already been infected with the virus that causes COVID-19.

Between April 28 to May 4, teams of public health professionals will visit randomly selected homes in different areas of Fulton and DeKalb counties. Household members will be asked to answer survey questions and provide a blood sample to be tested for antibodies for SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19. Antibodies are produced when someone has previously been infected with COVID-19.

“We encourage everyone who is visited by the teams to participate in this very important survey that can help public health officials assess how widespread COVID-19 is in certain areas,” said Kathleen E. Toomey, M.D., M.P.H., DPH commissioner. “This is another way that Georgians can play a role in helping fight this virus.”

Antibody tests, also known as serology tests because they look at blood “serum,” cannot determine if a person has an active COVID-19 infection at the time the sample is taken. The antibodies for SARS-CoV-2 typically take one to three weeks to develop. The antibody test can help identify people who were infected but didn’t have symptoms or weren’t tested for COVID-19. This testing is important to understand who has had the virus. The results of this study may help provide important information needed to help public health officials understand COVID-19 and inform future strategies to prevent further spread of the virus.

Fulton and DeKalb counties were selected because community transmission of confirmed COVID-19 cases is occurring in these counties. The areas that teams will visit within each county are census blocks, used by the U.S. Census Bureau, and were randomly selected. Households will be randomly selected within each area. Only homes approached by the investigation teams are eligible to participate. Participation is voluntary. Teams will be identifiable by their CDC vests and CDC badges. They will also have an official letter from CDC and the GA Department of Public Health.

For more information about the serosurvey, visit https://dph.georgia.gov/covid-19-antibody-testing.

For general information about antibody testing, also known as serology testing, visit the CDC website https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/lab/serology-testing.html”

 

If you are a COVID-19 front line nurse, please consider completing the GNA COVID-19 Front Line Nurses Experience Survey. We need to hear from you. If you already did, allow us to say THANK YOU! https://www.surveymonkey.com/r/GNACOVID-19FrontLineNursesExperienceSurvey