Just as the NFL sailed with a mild summer at the helm of COVID-19 that advised that it might be fully stocked to carry out its plan for a full season amid a pandemic, came Sunday.
News came in with the urgency of the speaker’s effects reporting on election night: the Browns, then the Bears. Steelers and Vikings. Patriots. The Lions.
The good news is that the effects have been fixed in two words: false positives.
There’s been no NFL outbreak. At least not yet. The chimney alarm went off because of a false alarm.
However, truth control for the NFL, with the initial diagnosis of dozens of COVID-19 tests indicating negative positive cases, has come to illustrate how temporarily the league and NFL players’ union can give way with a collapse in the system.
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The fact that the multitude of obvious false positives can be attributed to an unmarried BioReference lab in New Jersey is the clue. The league uses about a dozen labs to test all 32 teams, and none of the other labs reported dramatic spikes.
In a statement, the NFL said it was running with BioReference to launch an immediate investigation. Meanwhile, the affected groups entered emergency reaction mode as defined in the league protocols.
Since the opening of the camps, the league has conducted around 150,000 tests on players, coaches and staff, with such an overwhelming amount of negative effects that the number of players from across the league included in the COVID-19 reserve list has been reduced to a figure. . .
But do you think if the eruption of false positives over the weekend occurred 3 Sundays later, like September 13, on Sunday of week 1?
Chaos. That is what you can imagine.
No, with NFL COVID protocols and process reliability, games can be won or lost, postponed, or canceled in the lab.
The weekend drama didn’t make education at the camp clear, even though Cleveland was in limbo for that, and a few dozen players from the groups involved couldn’t train. false, would possibly return after two negative checks. Many of the players who sat down on Sunday were expected to return to the paintings on Monday.
Somehow, Matthew Stafford could shrink. Earlier this month, the Lions quarterback went through a false positive that, under pressure, wanted to review the protocols for loading layers of load to verify the positives in other people who had no symptoms of the new coronavirus.
A few days after Stafford’s episode, the league required two confirmation checks for positive cases within 24 hours, adding a point-of-service check to analyze on the site.
At the time the revised protocols were announced, Allen Sills, the NFL’s leading adviser, raised the challenge.
“We will be more informed about the evidence,” Sills said in a call to the convention.
Sills warned that each new positive result does not equate to a new case of COVID-19. In some cases, for example, a person may simply be a “persistent positive,” someone who has recovered from the coronavirus but still shows lines. up to six months later.
There is no indication at this level that the eruption of positive tests over the weekend has any of the connection factors, such as past exposure to COVID-19.
However, the weekend’s drama actually shows the merits of daily testing, anything the players’ union insisted on after the NFL first sought a limited window for daily testing. It is also transparent that confirmation tests should be added to the protocol.
The objective of the tests, of course, is to stumble upon the case of COVID-19 and involve the damage by ousting the inflamed individual and minimizing the spread.
Capturing fake instances is also a challenge, with other potential damage.
The Bills practiced Sunday without Quarterback Josh Allen, alleged victim of a verification result. Quick changes were used. Practice has happened.
Bill General Manager Brandon Beane called it a “good chimney exercise. “
In words, major now than in September.