Slovakia's Mass Testing: A Critical Look at the Negative Effects

Abstract

This e-letter re-evaluates the epidemiological impact of nationwide mass antigen testing in Slovakia. While initial reports Pavelka proposed a causal link between these campaigns and declining viral prevalence, granular re-analysis reveals a significant temporal mismatch. We argue that the proclaimed success represents a conceptual nexus lacking empirical support; shifts in the effective reproduction number (Rt), case trajectories, and mortality rates do not align with the testing rounds. Crucially, the mortality-to-hospital admission ratio exhibits a distinct inverse relationship with the interventions. Rather than providing a clinical benefit, the testing campaigns were followed by increased mortality and a strained healthcare system. We contend that these adverse outcomes were a direct consequence of the testing policy, which sustained higher overall mobility levels compared to the United Kingdom. By overattributing causality to mass testing, a spurious nexus was constructed, obscuring the true drivers of the pandemic and its socio-economic consequences.

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