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Fla. lawmaker criticizes state’s contact tracing program after tracer calls

Rep. Shevrin Jones tested positive last week
Posted at 11:11 AM, Jul 08, 2020
and last updated 2020-07-08 11:11:27-04

A Florida lawmaker is questioning the state’s contact tracing program after a tracer reached out to him after he tested positive for COVID-19.

Florida Representative Shevrin Jones hasn’t been shy about letting the public know he recently tested positive for COVID-19.

“I wouldn’t wish this on anyone,” he said. “I call it the yo-yo disease, one minute you’re fine and then you feel like crap,” he said during a Zoom interview on Tuesday, one week after he went to the ER with symptoms.

A day later, he got the results that he tested positive for COVID-19.

Now, the Broward County Democrat is also making known his disgust with the state’s contact tracing program following a call he received last Thursday from a tracer in Broward County seeking details about his own whereabouts.

“The young lady who called, she wasn’t knowledgeable at all,” said Jones.

Just a few questions into their conversation, Jones said the tracing stopped when the call got disconnected.

“I said maybe she’ll give me a callback but that never happened,” Jones explained.

When asked what that told him about the state’s program he responded, “that we need a new system.”

The Representative shared his frustrations in a Twitter post on Monday where he described what happened.

With cases surging in the Sunshine State, Florida’s contact tracing efforts have expanded to 1,500 tracers in recent months according to the Florida Department of Health.

In late May, the state added several hundred more tracers to its efforts when it quietly contracted with an outside firm.

RELATED: Government contractor known to have problematic history hired to help Florida expand contact tracing

Details of that agreement have not been disclosed by the department and a copy of the state’s contract has yet to be posted online or provided to us in response to our public records request.

But the increasing number of cases in Florida still far outweighs the number of tracers.

Industry standards recommend 30 tracers per 100,000 people. With a population of 20 million people, that would mean Florida should have roughly 6,000 tracers. Instead, the state has around 2,000.

Though the state remains tight-lipped about its program, a questionnaire available on the state’s website gives a glimpse into how tracers are doing the job.

The four-page form includes details including the patient's symptoms to where they were tested. In addition, risk factors include the types of contacts patients came in touch with 14 days prior to symptoms or testing.

Representative Jones said he’s simply calling out what he sees while still trying to recover from a virus showing no signs of going away soon.

“It’s bringing light to an issue. If we’re serious about trying to save people’s lives in this time then we have to do our part,” Jones said.