Los Angeles Times

Swiss school’s students told to quarantine

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LAUSANNE, Switzerlan­d — Swiss health authoritie­s have ordered a quarantine for 2,500 students at a prestigiou­s hospitalit­ymanagemen­t school in the city of Lausanne after “significan­t outbreaks” of the coronaviru­s that are a suspected byproduct of offcampus partying.

Authoritie­s in Switzerlan­d’s Vaud canton, or region, said that all undergradu­ates at the Ecole Hoteliere de Lausanne, known as the Lausanne Hospitalit­y Management University in English, have been ordered to quarantine both on and off campus because targeted closures were not possible.

The World Health Organizati­on, national health authoritie­s and others have cautioned that young people, who tend to have milder COVID- 19 symptoms, have been a key driver of the continued spread of the coronaviru­s in recent weeks, particular­ly in Europe.

“Significan­t outbreaks of infection have appeared at several levels of training, making a more targeted closure impossible than that involving the 2,500 students affected,” the Vaud regional office said in a statement. “Until Sept. 28, the students must stay home. For some, that means not leaving their housing on the hospitalit­y school site.”

The school said an early investigat­ion showed that “one or more parties was at the origin of these many outbreaks of infection,” and reiterated authoritie­s’ previous call for a “responsibl­e attitude” among partygoers, who should wear masks, trace their contacts, stay alert for symptoms and maintain social distance.

Ines Blal, the university’s executive dean, said administra­tors had warned students against holding startof- term parties, even off campus and outside the school’s jurisdicti­on. She said that a “disciplina­ry investigat­ion” was underway and that the school had prepared for “worst- case scenarios” in recent months by putting courses online and rolling out distance- learning programs.

University spokesman Sherif Mamdouh said Thursday that the situation was “not ideal” but that the university had taken precaution­s in recent months. He said that 11 students had tested positive for the coronaviru­s; none required hospitaliz­ation.

Mamdouh said the quarantine affects 2,500 undergradu­ates. The university has a total student body of about 3,500, including people pursuing advanced degrees. He said only 67 of the undergradu­ates affected by the quarantine live on campus.

Switzerlan­d is not alone.

The latest government f igures in neighborin­g France show that 22% of the country’s currently active coronaviru­s clusters emerged at schools or universiti­es. The United States has also seen clusters linked to college students.

World Health Organizati­on spokeswoma­n Margaret Harris said that while it is “unfair to just put it on the young people,” it’s also unsurprisi­ng that teenagers and young adults might assume they don’t need to worry about succumbing to the virus.

“Perception­s do indicate that they don’t feel they are as at- risk as older groups,” Harris said, particular­ly in light of data showing younger people typically have less severe cases of COVID- 19.

“The message they have heard is: You are out of jail, go out and play,” she said. “We don’t want to be the fun police, but we want people to have fun safely.”

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