Please ensure Javascript is enabled for purposes of website accessibility
Fresno County Needs Contact Tracers, Isn't Waiting for Newsom
TLBBHMAP3-U010ALB5ANM-348f959abae2-512-300x300-1
By Jim Jakobs, Digital Producer
Published 5 years ago on
May 11, 2020

Share

Call, text, email, and repeat. Call, text, email, and repeat again.

The job of a COVID-19 contact tracer, or what Gov. Newsom calls a “disease detective,” isn’t glamorous.

But the job is so important that Fresno County must come up with 250 or more contact tracers to reopen the economy in phase two of Newsom’s pandemic roadmap. The county wants at least 300 contact tracers on board.

“We’re not going to wait for the state to staff, the contact tracing program,” said Fresno County Public Health Director David Pomaville during a Zoom meeting with reporters Friday. Pomaville says Fresno County has about 70 tracers now. They are all county employees with other assignments in “normal” times.

Contact Tracer Candidates Reaching Out

Interim Fresno County Health Officer Dr. Rais Vohra hopes to soon share some good news about contact tracing.

“People have actually reached out to us to say how can I become a contact tracer?” Vohra said. “And, I would say keep doing that, please. And stay tuned.”

If you’d like to become a contact tracer, here is the link to indicate that you’re interested.

“We really want contact tracing to be something that we do together. Whether that’s the schools or the first response agencies or the civic leadership agencies, faith-based and community-based organizations,” Vohra said. “We really want to teach each other what will work … and help do containment of potential cases, wherever they pop up.”.

[covid-19-tracker]

Virtual Training Program is a Virtual Waiting Room

When GV Wire asked Pomaville how many Fresno County residents got into Gov. Newsom’s contact tracing academy, he said the county bumped into a virtual wall.

“They filled up the pilot within a matter of hours, and so we’re on a waiting list to get our people in the next round of training,” Pomaville said.

He said the virtual academy touted by the governor has many unknowns, but he wants to get some of his staff into the academy. The goal is to learn about the course content and determine what competencies the people will have after the training.

However, Pomaville isn’t waiting: “We’re doing our own in-house training of our staff right now. But if they’ve built a better mousetrap, we want to be able to use it.”

The governor said the first participants in the academy will not be new hires. At least initially, they will be repurposed government employees. Newsom’s goal is to train 20,000 people in two months.

Fresno County Contact Tracer Qualifications

County health department employees now being trained comprise the first wave of contact tracers. Eventually, the county will need to replace all of them.

“What we need to really build is the capacity to replace those individuals, to be able to stay on this, and we’re looking at the time frame from June 1 through the end of the calendar year,” Pomaville said.

To do that, the county is setting aside funding from the CARES Act.

Primary care and hospital systems in the county will be the priority for the tracing program moving forward. This will allow a contact tracer to be present the moment a person is confirmed COVID-19 positive. The county will lean on already established community partnerships and health clinics that have a strong understanding of the population they serve.

Once COVID-19 cases are identified, the contact tracers spring into action.

“So once we’ve identified somebody we want to keep in contact them with them over the course of a week or two. We can do that using smartphones and text messaging and doing phone-calling … for those harder to reach patients,” Pomaville said.

“What’s more important is, we have people who know and understand the communities that they’re working in. Speaking (the right) language. There are all kinds of barriers that come up.”

Watch: The Role of a Contact Tracer

High-End Data System

Just as important as the contact tracers is sharing the data with other counties and the state.

“That integrated system is going to be very important, and the state has made very strong observations and commitments that they’re putting together a very high-end data system,” Pomaville said. “I think similar to what’s being done in Massachusetts.”

The website for Massachusetts’ Community Tracing Collaborative describes the tracing protocol:

“When we call, a MA COVID team member will ask you for a list of all of the people you were within six feet of during the two days before you had symptoms. If you don’t have symptoms, we’ll ask about your activity during the two days before your diagnosis. We will also ask for the phone numbers of anyone you tell us about, so they can be called and cared for.”

In addition to what the state of California is doing to develop its data system, Pomaville said, “We’ve set aside about $10 million dollars of the CARES Act to support that effort.”

 

DON'T MISS

First California EV Mandates Hit Automakers This Year. Most Are Not Even Close

DON'T MISS

He Spent Decades Researching Dementia. Trump’s DEI Purge Killed His Grant, and Dozens More

DON'T MISS

Other States Do Housing Better Than California; a New Study Shows How They Do It

DON'T MISS

Trump Administration Task Force to Consider Declassifying COVID-19 Origins Materials

DON'T MISS

At the Supreme Court, the Trump Agenda Is Always an ‘Emergency’

DON'T MISS

Wing of Plane Carrying 6 Members of Congress Is Clipped at Reagan Airport

DON'T MISS

Trump Repeals Biden-Era Limit on Water Flow in Shower Heads

DON'T MISS

Helicopter Has Crashed in the Hudson River off Manhattan, Authorities Say

DON'T MISS

Social Security Rolls Back Restrictions on Filing for Benefits by Phone

DON'T MISS

Trump and Netanyahu Steer Toward an Ugly World, Together

DON'T MISS

Visalia Driver Crashes Into Utility Pole, Causing Major Delays on Goshen Avenue

UP NEXT

Helicopter Has Crashed in the Hudson River off Manhattan, Authorities Say

UP NEXT

Merced Revises Flag Policy After Debate. ‘I Just Don’t See That as the Role of Government’

UP NEXT

Fresno Two-Vehicle Crash Causes Power Outage, Traffic Backup Near Fruit and Herndon

UP NEXT

Valley Crime Stoppers’ Most Wanted Person of the Day: Leal Ray Simmons

UP NEXT

Fresno Police Will Conduct DUI Patrols on Saturday

UP NEXT

Visalia Motorcyclist Ejected in Early Morning Crash

UP NEXT

Wonton Serves up a Big Dish of Playful Companionship

UP NEXT

Fewer Americans Say the Israel-Hamas War Is Important: Survey

UP NEXT

Clovis Teen Bicyclist Dies After Being Hit Near Bullard and Temperance

UP NEXT

New Kaweah Health Clinic Is Coming to Woodlake

At the Supreme Court, the Trump Agenda Is Always an ‘Emergency’

1 hour ago

Wing of Plane Carrying 6 Members of Congress Is Clipped at Reagan Airport

1 hour ago

Trump Repeals Biden-Era Limit on Water Flow in Shower Heads

1 hour ago

Helicopter Has Crashed in the Hudson River off Manhattan, Authorities Say

1 hour ago

Social Security Rolls Back Restrictions on Filing for Benefits by Phone

1 hour ago

Trump and Netanyahu Steer Toward an Ugly World, Together

2 hours ago

Visalia Driver Crashes Into Utility Pole, Causing Major Delays on Goshen Avenue

2 hours ago

Sidelined and Still Processing Her Defeat, Harris Looks for a Way Back In

2 hours ago

Trump’s ‘Buy’ Tip on Social Media Before His Tariffs Pause Made Money for Investors Who Listened

2 hours ago

California Woman Arrested in Russia Freed in Prisoner Swap: What We Know

3 hours ago

He Spent Decades Researching Dementia. Trump’s DEI Purge Killed His Grant, and Dozens More

This story was originally published by CalMatters. Sign up for their newsletters. A California neurologist who’s among the nation’s top rese...

37 minutes ago

37 minutes ago

He Spent Decades Researching Dementia. Trump’s DEI Purge Killed His Grant, and Dozens More

39 minutes ago

Other States Do Housing Better Than California; a New Study Shows How They Do It

Director of National Intelligence Tulsi Gabbard, flanked by FBI Director Kash Patel, left, and CIA Director John Ratcliffe, testifies as the House Intelligence Committee holds a hearing on worldwide threats, at the Capitol, in Washington, Wednesday, March 26, 2025. (AP/J. Scott Applewhite)
50 minutes ago

Trump Administration Task Force to Consider Declassifying COVID-19 Origins Materials

1 hour ago

At the Supreme Court, the Trump Agenda Is Always an ‘Emergency’

1 hour ago

Wing of Plane Carrying 6 Members of Congress Is Clipped at Reagan Airport

1 hour ago

Trump Repeals Biden-Era Limit on Water Flow in Shower Heads

A helicopter crashed into the Hudson River near Manhattan on Thursday afternoon, prompting a rescue response from fire department crews and multiple boats. (Shutterstock)
1 hour ago

Helicopter Has Crashed in the Hudson River off Manhattan, Authorities Say

1 hour ago

Social Security Rolls Back Restrictions on Filing for Benefits by Phone

Help continue the work that gets you the news that matters most.

Search

Send this to a friend