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Detective, nurse, confidant: Virus tracers play many roles

SALT LAKE CITY (AP) - Health investigator Mackenzie Bray smiles and chuckles as she chats by phone with a retired Utah man who just tested positive for the coronavirus.

She's trying to keep the mood light because she needs to find out where he's been and who he's been around for the past seven days. She gently peppers him with questions, including where he and his wife stopped to buy flowers on a visit to a cemetery. She encourages him to go through his bank statement to see if it reminds him of any store visits he made.

Midway through the conversation, a possible break: His wife lets slip that they had family over for Mother's Day, including a grandchild who couldn't stop slobbering.

'œWas there like a shared food platter or something like that?'ť Bray asks. 'œThere was, OK, yep ... sharing food or sharing drinks, even just being on the same table, it can spread that way.''ť

Suddenly, with a shared punch bowl, the web has widened, and Bray has dozens more people to track down.

She is among an army of health professionals around the world filling one of the most important roles in the effort to guard against a resurgence of the coronavirus. The practice of so-called contact tracing requires a hybrid job of interrogator, therapist and nurse as they try coax nervous people to be honest.

The goal: To create a road map of everywhere infected people have been and who they've been around.

While other countries have devised national approaches, a patchwork of efforts has emerged in the U.S. where states are left to create their own program.

Bray normally does this type of work to track contacts for people with sexually transmitted diseases. She is now one of 130 people at the Salt Lake County health department assigned to track coronavirus cases in the Salt Lake City area. The investigators, many of them nurses, each juggle 30 to 40 cases, and try to reach everyone the original person was within 6 feet (1.8 meters) of for 10 minutes or more. They stay in touch with some people throughout the 14-day incubation period, and calls can take 30 minutes or more as they meticulously go through a list of questions.

Some estimate as many as 300,000 contact tracers would be needed in the U.S. to adequately curtail the spread. While some states like Utah have reported having enough contact tracers, others are hundreds or even thousands of people short.

The contact tracers often find themselves in a tangled web of half-truths and facts that don't match up. Language and cultural barriers arise that require interpreters and taxing conversations that leave the investigators wondering if the person understands what they're trying to do.

They land on occasion into complicated family dynamics where people are reluctant to tell the truth.

Health investigator Maria DiCaro found out days into a case that a father was sleeping in his car because he and his wife were separating. The man had stopped returning DiCaro's calls, and that key information came from his child.

'œI get people that lie all time,'ť DiCaro said. 'œI try to get as much information from the beginning but it's just not always the case. And time is one of those things you can't take back when you are trying to prevent and you know do these contact tracing investigations.'ť

Each call is an exercise in good cop, bad cop. She needs people to cooperate, but no one is legally required to answer the questions. Usually kindness works better than strong words.

Some people lie because they're scared, or they forget an outing. Construction workers, housekeepers and others without paid sick time may gloss over symptoms so they can get back to work. Some immigrants without documentation brush off testing because they fear it could lead to deportation.

'œPeople sometimes think contact tracing is black and white but there is a lot of gray that goes into it," said Bray, who often thinks about her parents and 97-year-old grandmother as she works to help stop the spread of the virus. 'œOur worst fear is that we push too hard and we lose someone. It's not just their health on the line, it's the people around them.'ť

No matter the tension, Bray and DiCaro give frequent reminders of why it all matters: 'œThank you for what you're doing. You're helping the community," DiCaro says during one call.

She knows that on the other end of the line, the first call from a tracer can be jarring. Sometimes, DiCaro and Bray have to break the news that someone was exposed or tested positive.

'œIt's normal to talk to like your doctor, but you don't ever expect the health department to call you and be like, '~You were exposed to a serious disease,''ť said Anissa Archuleta.

The 23-year-old got a call from DiCaro after she, her sister and her mother took a rare break from hunkering down to help organize a drive-by birthday party for a young cousin. They dropped off a present, then caved and accepted an impromptu invitation to go inside to grab some food.

What they didn't know: the father of the birthday boy had the coronavirus, and unknowingly exposed more than a dozen people at the gathering.

After that first call, DiCaro checked in every day for two weeks. The fear slowly faded after their tests came back negative and they began building a rapport with DiCaro. She asked about their symptoms and how they were feeling each day and learned about how Archuleta's mother lost her voice to fibromyalgia. Archuleta would pass along messages her mother whispered in her ear.

And after a while, Archuleta began asking DiCaro about her life and how she was holding up.

About a week in to their calls, on the daily check-in, Archuleta thanked DiCaro for caring about them and checking in every day. Tears welled up in DiCaro's eyes.

'œAh thanks,'ť she said as she grabbed a Kleenex to wipe her eyes.

After she hung up, she leaned back in her chair and closed her eyes for a few seconds.

'œWhen you do this like 10-12 hours a day ... It's nice to get those positive reactions from people that are very grateful who do see the purpose of what we are doing,'ť said DiCaro. 'œIt's nice to be appreciated.'ť

In this Tuesday, May 19, 2020, photo, health investigator Mackenzie Bray sits in her office at the Salt Lake County Health Department in Salt Lake City. Bray normally works to track contacts for people with sexually transmitted diseases, but she was re-assigned during the coronavirus pandemic. She is now one of 130 people at this county health department assigned to track down COVID-19 cases in Utah's urban center around Salt Lake City. The investigators, many of them nurses, each juggle 30 to 40 cases that can include a total of several hundred people. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer) The Associated Press
Salt Lake County Health Department public health nurse Lee Cherie Booth performs a coronavirus test outside the Salt Lake County Health Department, Wednesday, May 20, 2020, in Salt Lake City. People who test positive are logged into an online database and assigned as new cases to contact tracers at the health department who call them to find out who they've been around and where they've been. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer) The Associated Press
In this Monday, May 18, 2020, photo, Anissa Archuleta, center, sits at a window with her sister Alexis Archuleta, right, and her mother, Jaime Ortega, at their home in Midvale, Utah. Ortega and her two daughters had to get tested and be monitored for two weeks after they stopped by a birthday party for a young cousin whose father unknowingly had the coronavirus. The women all tested negative, but received daily calls from health investigator Maria DiCaro to check on their symptoms. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer) The Associated Press
In this Tuesday, May 19, 2020, photo, health investigator Mackenzie Bray adjusts her mask at the Salt Lake County Health Department, in Salt Lake City. Bray normally works to track contacts for people with sexually transmitted diseases, but she was re-assigned during the coronavirus pandemic. She is now one of 130 people at this county health department assigned to track down COVID-19 cases in Utah's urban center around Salt Lake City. The investigators, many of them nurses, each juggle 30 to 40 cases that can include a total of several hundred people. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer) The Associated Press
In this May 13, 2020, photo, health investigator Maria DiCaro chats by phone at her office at the Salt Lake County Health Department, in Salt Lake City. Contact tracers often find themselves in a tangled web of half-truths and fact that don't match up. Language and cultural barriers arise that require interpreters and taxing conversations that leave the contact tracers wondering if the person understands what they're trying to do. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer) The Associated Press
In this Monday, May 18, 2020, photo, Anissa Archuleta wears her mask at her home in Midvale, Utah. Jaime Ortega and her two daughters Anissa Archuleta and Alexis Archuleta had to get tested and be monitored for two weeks after they stopped by a birthday party for a young cousin whose father unknowingly had the new coronavirus. The women all tested negative, but received daily calls from health investigator Maria DiCaro to check on their symptoms. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer) The Associated Press
In this Monday, May 11, 2020, photo, Salt Lake County Health Department public health nurse Lee Cherie Booth points to a board showing a hypothetical case that serves as a training tool to teach new contact tracers how to track all the people they need to reach out to after a person tests positive for the new coronavirus. Some cases involve just a few family members, while others require health investigators to alert dozens of people who might have been exposed. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer) The Associated Press
In this Monday, May 18, 2020, photo, Anissa Archuleta, right, and her mother, Jaime Ortega, sit at a window of their home in Midvale, Utah. Ortega and her two daughters Anissa Archuleta and Alexis Archuleta had to get tested and be monitored for two weeks after they stopped by a birthday party for a young cousin whose father unknowingly had the coronavirus. The women all tested negative, but received daily calls from health investigator Maria DiCaro to check on their symptoms. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer) The Associated Press
In this May 11, 2020, photo, health investigator Maria DiCaro grabs a facial tissue to wipe her eyes after chatting by phone with a person who had been exposed to somebody else who tested positive for the coronavirus at her office at the Salt Lake County Health Department, in Salt Lake City. The contact tracers often find themselves in a tangled web of half-truths and fact that don't match up. Language and cultural barriers arise that require interpreters and taxing conversations that leave the contact tracers wondering if the person understands what they're trying to do. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer) The Associated Press
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