Lodi News-Sentinel

Member of COVID-19 committee confident in athlete safety

- By Ben Bolch

Like a coaching staff fine-tuning a game plan, the Pac-12 Conference’s COVID-19 medical advisory committee is finalizing its suggested protocols as athletes prepare to return to campuses for voluntary workouts.

The advisory committee, comprising sports medicine physicians and infectious disease experts from every school in the conference, plans to present its suggestion­s before June 15, the earliest that athletes will be allowed to come back on campus.

UCLA and USC have not announced when they will allow their athletes to return as they wait for Los Angeles County officials to move into a more lenient phase of their reopening plans. But one member of the Pac-12 advisory committee said Friday

that adequate safeguards should be in place by the time that happens.

“I feel very confident that the plan that we’ll come up will help keep athletes and staff members, coaches, facility members and students safe,” said Dr. Annabelle de St. Maurice, a UCLA assistant professor of pediatrics in the division of infectious diseases. De St. Maurice cited the collective expertise of a committee that also includes David McAllister, an orthopedic surgeon who is head team physician for the Lakers and associate head team physician for the UCLA athletic department, as the reason for her confidence in its plan.

Pac-12 Commission­er Larry Scott has said that all athletes returning to campus would receive both diagnostic and antibody tests to determine their COVID-19 status and whether they might already have acquired some protection against the disease.

De St. Maurice said protocols are being developed for athletes who test positive upon their return to campus as well as once workouts and practices have resumed.

UCLA coach Chip Kelly has said his team would need about six weeks of preparatio­ns before opening its season, meaning the Bruins would need to start workouts around July 18 considerin­g their opener against New Mexico State is scheduled for Aug. 29 at the Rose Bowl.

But might the positive test of one or more players put the entire team at risk of shutting down practice?

School officials would have to determine who was at risk of having contracted the disease from a positive teammate, de St. Maurice said, noting that L.A. County currently defines contact as having

been within six feet of someone for at least 15 minutes.

Next would come the isolation of those possibly infected and continued testing.

In its efforts to prevent the spread of the novel

coronaviru­s, the committee is developing recommenda­tions for disinfecti­ng surfaces and expanded spacing in what have typically been cramped confines inside locker rooms, weight rooms and dining facilities.

“As you know, we are still learning a lot about this virus,” de St. Maurice said.

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