Shorewood COVID Testing Site Closed While Under Scrutiny

SHOREWOOD, WI — A privately-owned COVID-19 testing site in Shorewood will halt operations until Jan. 22 after questions and concerns have filtered in about the company, Center for Covid Control.

The Illinois-based company, which has locations across Milwaukee, Wisconsin and the nation, acknowledged the reported issues in a news release and said the operations halt across the nation is to allow for further staff training across its over 300 listed locations.

Some states have begun investigations into the company. The Oregon Health Authority says they have received no test results from the company despite a law requiring them to be passed along to state or local health agencies, and the Oregon DOJ is investigating after receiving complaints.

Oregon is one of at least four states – including Washington, California, and Massachusetts – that have opened investigations.

RELATED: Oregon DOJ Probe Leads National COVID Testing Biz To Pause Ops

For one site in Waukesha, Earl Mickler told FOX6 News he received a negative test result before he even stepped in the door to have the test done.

Other sites in Wisconsin have also come under question. The City of Appleton recently put out an alert about a location in Darboy that has received complaints about social distancing, optional mask-wearing and tests not being returned, WBAY reports.

Over two dozen negative reviews were left for a testing site in Worcester, Massachusetts. Reviewers complained of long waits for testing results, or that the location was closed during advertised hours.

The company says the rapid spread of the omicron variant, including within its ranks of 3000 staff members, is to blame for customer inconveniences. The staffing challenges have impacted patient wait times, consistent opening hours and delays in reporting test results, the company claims.

The company added it saw a "dramatic spike" in testing demand after omicron first landed, "equating to most individual testing sites seeing an overwhelming 10x increase in patients."

At the Shorewood site on Tuesday, a sign could be seen in the window saying it is only offering antigen tests. The make-shift facility was marked by a lack of decor, empty floor space, and empty red interior walls. The site appeared to be staffed by two employees.

As they arrived, test-takers were instructed to take a bag containing a small vial and a nasal swab from a central table and to sit at a TV dinner tray nearby. Staff directed test-takers as a group to swab both nostrils five times each, and to then stir the swab in the vial of liquid at least 20 times. Test results were sent to one Patch reporter within 30 minutes of taking the test.

The North Shore Health Department did not immediately get back to Patch after being asked about the site.

Colin Miner, Patch Staff, contributed to this report.

This article originally appeared on the Shorewood Patch