Players face backlash over quick
coronavirus tests as others wait
Send a link to a friend
[March 19, 2020]
By Steve Keating
TORONTO (Reuters) - While the NBA
champion Toronto Raptors, Los Angeles Lakers and Brooklyn Nets
quickly received coronavirus tests, the general public has been left
waiting, sparking a backlash over privileged athletes' and
celebrities' access to care.
"We wish them a speedy recovery. But, with all due respect, an
entire NBA team should NOT get tested for COVID-19 while there are
critically ill patients waiting to be tested," tweeted New York City
Mayor Bill de Blasio after it was reported the Nets had been tested
and four players were isolated after positive coronavirus results.
"Tests should not be for the wealthy, but for the sick."
As the coronavirus spreads and the United States deals with a
shortage of test kits, the public has grown increasingly disgruntled
over the ease by which professional athletes get tested while others
displaying symptoms are forced to wait.
The highly contagious respiratory illness caused by the virus has
now infected close to 8,000 Americans while the death toll has
climbed to at least 145.
NBA commissioner Adam Silver, in an interview with ESPN on
Wednesday, said he could understand de Blasio's concern but the
bigger one was that there are not enough tests available and that
the league was simply following protocol.
"I of course understand his point and it's unfortunate that we're in
this position as a society that it's triage when it comes to
testing," said Silver, adding that eight full teams as well as
individual players have been tested. "And so the fundamental issue
is there are insufficient tests.
"But we've been following the recommendations of public health
officials."
USA Today reported last week that after Utah Jazz's Rudy Gobert
tested positive for the virus 58 members of the Jazz organization
were tested.
INFECTED PLAYERS
So were the Oklahoma Thunder, the team the Jazz were scheduled to
play last Wednesday, and the entire Toronto Raptors travelling squad
who were concerned they might have come in contact with infected
players during a visit to Salt Lake City on March 9.
[to top of second column] |
An NBA logo is seen on the facade of its flagship store at the
Wangfujing shopping street in Beijing, China October 8, 2019.
REUTERS/Tingshu Wang
The Los Angeles Lakers, the last team to play the Nets before the
NBA season was suspended, announced on Wednesday their players were
also undergoing tests for COVID-19.
The ability of NBA teams to secure tests on demand has drawn the
wrath of fans on social media.
"The thing is that is always the case. The rich will always get it
first and the poor will always get it last," tweeted @thedrsec, who
has over 23,000 followers and a radio program on 22 stations across
seven states.
President Donald Trump waded into the issue during a news conference
on Wednesday when he was asked, "How are non-symptomatic
professional athletes getting tests while others are waiting in line
and can’t get them? Do the well connected go to the front of the
line?"
"No, I wouldn’t say so," said the president. "But perhaps that’s the
story of life. That does happen on occasion, and I’ve noticed where
people have been tested fairly quickly."
In most cases the ability of teams to get their players tested has
had more to do with money and going through private labs than
state-run public health departments and jumping the queue.
The NBA also defended the speedy action as a way of preventing the
spread of the virus with testing of players drawing it to the
attention of young people.
"The NBA's move to halt its season led the way for other leagues and
raised awareness of the threat of the virus," said Silver.
"My sense was that especially among young people, people were not
taking these protocols very seriously until we did what we did."
(Reporting by Steve Keating in Toronto. Additional reporting Rory
Carroll in Los Angeles, Amy Tennery in New York, Editing by Ed
Osmond)
[© 2020 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2020 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |