Where We Stand with Covid-19 — August 21
An expected outcome: Colleges fail to provide adequate testing, suffer outbreaks and blame their students. This week, we analyze the "flips and flops" of many colleges across the U.S.
Welcome back to Week 19 in my weekly reports analyzing the Covid-19 pandemic and its effects on the country, higher education and study abroad. This newsletter is a version of the post on my blog, Off the Silk Road, which contains many of the interactive elements in this week’s newsletter.
Last week, we discussed testing as a key to reopen schools and colleges and showed how many universities are woefully unprepared to keep their students safe this fall. I also mentioned that these weekly reports will take on a new form in the coming weeks; this week, we will recap the latest scientific studies and carefully analyze recent developments in colleges and universities throughout the country.
A national look
America continues to fight the pandemic in the final critical weeks of the summer, now averaging around 40,000-50,000 new cases and around 1,000 deaths per day. According to data from Johns Hopkins University, the rolling seven-day average of daily U.S. coronavirus deaths has dipped below 1,000 for the first time in nearly a month. In many aspects, these decreases are good news; however, an increase could be expected in the absence of strict nonpharmaceutical interventions with students returning to school and people returning to work. The president is now accusing the FDA of being a “deep state,” delaying Covid-19 vaccines and drugs (this is false).
This week we saw interesting new results on reopening American society from an NPR/PBS Newshour/Marist poll. Only 14% of Democrats think it’s a good idea to have students return to school, compared to 75% of Republicans.
Let’s take a look at some of the latest scientific developments:
A new CDC report on workplace outbreaks shows the toll the virus takes on minority communities. 59% of workers identified as Hispanic, 27% as non-Hispanic white and 19% as nonwhite.
A study from India published in the Journal of the American Association shows the efficacy of face shields.
Another study in JAMA found that “there was no difference in all-cause, in-hospital mortality between white and Black patients after adjusting for age, sex, insurance status, comorbidity, neighborhood deprivation, and site of care.”
The Atlantic’s Ed Yong published a comprehensive piece on the “long haulers” — people who are battling the symptoms of Covid-19 months after their initial diagnosis.
A new model shows non-uniform dynamics of viral spread as a function of symptom onset. For example, a “perfect test” after 2 days prior to symptom onset displays an apparent false negative rate of 17%. This shows that a proof of a single negative test for a return to school/work has a ⅙ chance of missing infected people.
In 23 states with adequate race/ethnicity data, the cumulative incidence of laboratory-confirmed Covid-19 among American Indian/Alaskan Native people was 3.5 times that among non-Hispanic white people, according to a CDC study.
Mass testing in 16 U.S. prisons and jails found SARS-CoV-2 prevalence ranging from 0%–86.8%, a median 12.1-fold increase over the number of cases identified by earlier symptom-based testing. Will this convince colleges to have testing plans not entirely based on symptoms?
1.5 million antibody tests conducted throughout New York City show a striking direct correlation between seroprevalence and household size (the larger the household, the more likely they are to have been exposed) and an inverse relationship between seroprevalence and high-income families (ZIP codes with average incomes of over $100,000 were less likely to be infected).
Some updates on vaccines:
A study preprint published in MedRxiv has new insights on vaccine distribution. Researchers found that for low vaccine effectiveness, it is optimal to allocate the vaccine to high-risk (older) age groups first. In contrast, for higher vaccine effectiveness, there is a switch to allocate the vaccine to high-transmission (younger) age groups first for high vaccination coverage.
Johns Hopkins’ Center for Health Security published a paper on vaccine allocation, ranking the top three priority groups as follows: (1) those who are “most essential” to implementing the Covid-19 response, including frontline healthcare workers caring for Covid-19 patients and “vaccine manufacturing and supply chain personnel”; (2) “those at the greatest risk of severe disease and death,” such as individuals aged 65 and older and those with certain underlying health conditions; and (3) those “most essential to maintaining core societal functions,” including public transportation and food supply personnel and teachers.
Pfizer and BioNTech’s favored Covid-19 vaccine has fewer side effects than their first.
As we move on to our discussion of higher education, new predictions from the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation at the University of Washington show 309,918 deaths predicted by December 1. Previously on August 6, the model predicted 295,011 deaths. With states easing mandates, that number could increase to 421,242 deaths. With 95% of the population wearing masks, that number could decrease to 240, 891 deaths. This underscores that the pandemic is far from over.
Higher education
The theme of this week’s higher ed section is “Flips and Flops.” As seen from the latest version of my Flip Tracker, a handful of colleges have abandoned their plans for an on-campus fall semester, the most prominent being Michigan State University, Ithaca College and the University of California-Los Angeles.
Many have cited recent outbreaks at other colleges as reasoning for their shifts, which are known as “flops.” Shortly, we will examine three major schools that have experienced large outbreaks.
Each week, we take a moment to acknowledge the wackier elements of colleges’ reopening plans, also known as the College RidicuList.
We received a report that Northeastern University President Joseph Aoun is writing a book about how Northeastern handled Covid-19. Although the university denied that the book deal was signed, it is still available for pre-order.
The University of Michigan has hired student ambassadors to help enforce health protocols; they even wear special shirts and masks. They have also partnered with the Ann Arbor Police Department.
A student at North Carolina State University, in the middle of an outbreak, told fellow students not to report Covid-19 cases to the school to avoid a shutdown. This is incredibly dangerous, and clearly did not work since the school subsequently switched to online classes.
An administrator at Northeastern University sent an email to some first-year students who voted “yes” on a poll on the Northeastern Class of ’24 Instagram asking if they intend to party, warning them that the behavior “will not be tolerated.” It seems that the “blaming the students” card is played before students even arrive on campus.
Purdue’s president, Mitch Daniels, is so preposterous that he’s posting comments from people who told him that bringing back students during a pandemic would be a bad idea. However, he has not fully brought back students yet. A smart Twitter user also found that he was caught in a drug bust during his college years at Princeton.
Albion College, in an effort to keep their students on campus, will be tracking their students’ cell phone locations.
Here are some samples from op-eds and editorials in student newspapers this week, which are always useful for capturing perspectives from students, faculty, staff and local community members.
In the eyes of one editor at the University of Kentucky’s student newspaper, contact tracing has failed. “To the University of Kentucky: I am scared. I tested positive, and you left me in silence. I don’t trust you to take care of me, or anyone else,” she writes.
“As a resident of the town of Middlebury, I am deeply concerned about the health and safety of my fellow community members who have expressed well-founded apprehension regarding it,” one Middlebury College student and local resident writes.
“Students and staff are not at fault for the spread of coronavirus — inadequate testing, tracing and isolation measures are,” my public health partner Stephanie McKay writes, in response to the Notre Dame outbreak.
“Administrators and faculty members develop strong relationships with students, including those who party like it’s their major,” one Economics professor writes. “We all need to lean into those relationships and encourage students to party like their lives depend on it.”
Over 150 first-year students at Colorado College are quarantined in their dorm for two weeks after one student tested positive. They are allowed 20 minutes of time outdoors each day and meals are delivered. Check out this incredibly well-written account from my colleagues Arielle Gordon, Miriam Brown and Isabel Hicks.
Our main focus today concerns three outbreaks at three universities that have all pivoted to online instruction. Let’s start with the University of North Carolina. The university currently has nine clusters of Covid-19 infections centered around residence halls and Greek houses, including one dorm with 102 cases. Student move-in started on August 3 and classes started on August 10. The first two clusters were confirmed on August 14 in the Granville Towers and Ehringhaus Community halls. The university cited FERPA as a reason not to share the exact numbers of confirmed cases (this is legally questionable — FERPA does stipulate not releasing any personally identifiable information but does not say anything about case numbers). They have also said they will not report individual cases, just clusters. On August 17, the student newspaper, The Daily Tar Heel, published a scathing editorial with a bold headline. “We’re tired of the gaslighting, tired of the secrecy, tired of being treated like cash cows by a University with such blatant disregard for our lives,” they wrote. Shortly after that editorial was published, the university recorded 130 new cases in a week and its test positivity jumped from 2.8% to 13.6%. Quarantine spaces were almost at capacity and some students were forced to quarantine off-campus. What we are seeing at UNC is a reflection of the national picture this spring. They opened too fast and too early, without any necessary protocols in place. UNC did not test any students as part of a surveillance program; they previously claimed testing created “a false sense of security” and only offered testing to those with symptoms. Everything at UNC could have been avoided; records acquired by The Daily Tar Heel showed public health experts warning about the dangers of reopening. UNC had no logical off-ramp plan and students were left to juggle classes in the middle of a campus evacuation. Community spread is already rampant, with the virus possibly infecting those in the local area. Here is a map of the currently identifiable clusters and UNC’s case count.
Equally disturbing is the situation out of Notre Dame, which moved classes online for two weeks and imposed strict social distancing guidelines to slow the virus’ spread. Notre Dame took pride in sending test kits from LabCorp to all students before they returned. All of the nearly 12,000 students were tested before they returned to campus to start class on Aug. 10. Of that group just 33 students (0.28%) tested positive. Students returned on August 3 and the university had no plans for screening asymptomatic students; testing was only available to those with symptoms. As experts have noted, testing before arriving on campus as a substitute for arrival testing is futile. On August 16, the student newspaper published a piece linking most new cases to an August 9 off-campus party. On August 18, Notre Dame’s dashboard was updated with new cases. The university reported 80 new cases in one day, with test positivity at almost 16%. “Don’t make us write obituaries,” the student newspaper wrote in an editorial. As reported by my colleague Kelli Smith, some students could not access testing during the outbreak; many had to go off-campus to get a test. Check out Notre Dame’s case count here.
North Carolina State University is the latest university to experience a major outbreak and pull the plug on an on-campus fall semester. The university shifted to online classes after recording 205 cases, 163 of those in the last three days. Like many schools, the majority of cases were linked to Greek life, parties or a combination of the two. The university decided to move online after over 500 students were in quarantine/isolation, most off-campus. According to their website, NCSU did not do surveillance testing, nor testing on entry, apparently, because “testing could not be completed at anywhere near the speed or volume required to be meaningful, effective or realistic.” Again, testing based on symptoms only will fail. Check out NCSU’s outbreak map and case count.
What are the lessons from these three schools that other colleges must take note?
Colleges must have robust testing protocols to detect asymptomatic infections. Testing solely based on symptoms, or voluntary testing programs, will not work. Take the University of Illinois, for example. The university is conducting 1% of the nation’s total tests, testing all students twice a week.
Colleges must pledge full transparency to regularly releasing case count and testing data. In the case of UNC, updating a dashboard weekly caused community members to be left in the dark while a deadly virus spread.
Colleges must ensure they have a clear off-ramp, as well as enough quarantine and isolation housing. We have received reports this week from the University of Iowa and New York University complaining about quarantine facilities.
Colleges must be able to trace outbreaks before they turn into clusters.
Everything that happened this week in higher ed was expected. Universities would blame the students, even suspending some for partying or other actions, when in fact it is the universities’ failure to protect their communities through adequate testing programs that is at fault. “What’s happening on college campuses is a microcosm of what’s happening in this country, which is a deflection of responsibility from the top down to the individual,” Harvard epidemiologist Julia Marcus said in The Chronicle of Higher Education. I hope that this week was a wake-up call for some universities to either scale up their testing programs or reverse course on an off-campus semester. Otherwise, incidents like those at these three schools will continue to happen in the coming weeks.
So where do we go from here? I have said that reopening colleges in a pandemic is the “We choose to go to the moon” moment of higher ed. It’s an experiment but if it works, it will be an American triumph. How do we get here? It is an equal combination of individual and institutional responsibility. Think of reopening a college as going to the moon. You’re not going to go to the moon without a rocket, right? That’s your testing plan. You’re not going to go without preparation, right? That’s an adequate plan for quarantine and isolation. These must be made on a college level. You’re not going to go to the moon without an experienced, trained and motivated crew, right? That’s a student body and community who is dedicated to one thing: protecting each other and ensuring health and safety as a top priority. Enthusiasm and working towards a goal is key. Punishing students for partying won’t work. No one punished a NASA engineer for a faulty rocket design. Instead, colleges should give students guidance. Tell them what they can do. Enjoy the outdoors! Socialize in a safe way! UNC and Notre Dame were destined to fail.Higher education professor Kevin McClure said that “shifting responsibility to students was like a pilot flying into a hurricane and blaming the ground crew for not doing enough to keep the plane safe.” UNC and Notre Dame flew into a hurricane without any preparation. Is it a long process? Yes. Does it require high levels of preparation, honesty and communication? Yes. Is it hard? Yes. But “we choose to go to the moon in this decade and do the other things, not because they are easy, but because they are hard.” And that’s what college should strive to do. Many colleges and universities this fall will fail. Something will go wrong. And it is important to prepare for failure. But colleges can start off with the right attitude, adequate preparation and the goal necessary to show the world what American higher ed can accomplish.
The Good Stuff
Let’s roll the clips of the good stuff. In my usual tradition, I feature my favorite stories from the week. Here are my Top 10.
Mei Xiang, the National Zoo’s female giant panda, delivered a “miracle” cub on Friday.
Calamari, the controversial state appetizer of Rhode Island, was the star of the Democratic National Convention.
Bernie Sanders’ background drew quite the attention on the internet, many questioning his large number of logs.
Some schools are enforcing Zoom dress codes for online classes.
Local community organizations are supporting some students at the University of North Carolina during these difficult times.
One TikTokker created a “March Madness Covid Edition” — a competition where schools compete to see who can stay open the longest.
Some travelers miss flying so much that they’re taking ‘flights’ to nowhere.
Vermont State Representative candidate Tiff Bluemle received quite the surprise when Kerry Washington referenced her at the DNC as her 8th grade teacher.
The New York Times published a photo essay of its abandoned New York City office due to employees working from home.
Libraries across Vermont are continuing to serve people despite the pandemic.
Conclusion
With the current national picture, everything we see across some colleges nationwide that are experiencing outbreaks was expected. If this wasn’t higher ed’s week of reckoning, I do not know what will be. Many colleges will experience outbreaks; some will be able to effectively control them and continue with the semester, and others may not and fail. The only way to have a shot at a successful in-person semester is with an equal institutional and individual commitment to protecting public health. Testing plans must be significantly augmented to surveil populations and catch instances of presymptomatic and asymptomatic transmission. Finally, colleges need to consider shifting the blame away from students and focusing on creating a safe community.
This week is the first in this new briefing-style report series and will continue throughout the fall. I welcome your feedback on this new style.
I’d like to thank all the student journalists with whom I have the pleasure of working. In the next weeks and months ahead, they will become vital in chronicling their colleges’ paths forward for the fall and beyond. Support their work by reading it.
I’d finally like to express my gratitude to the staffs at The Daily Tar Heel, The Observer at Notre Dame and the Technician at North Carolina State University. Amid national media attention, these journalists worked tirelessly to hold their communities accountable and provide accurate, timely information.
My best to all for good health.
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