The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Public health experts stay pessimisti­c about season

- By Ken Sugiura ken.sugiura@ajc.com

Last week’s announceme­nts by the ACC and SEC about schedule models tickled the hopes of college football fans that, just maybe, the season can be played and the rivalries can go forward. Georgia Tech fans joined fans of other ACC schools in analyzing the conference’s scheduling model and engaged in banter with Georgia fans over the SEC’s decision to not play a nonconfere­nce game, meaning a temporary halt to the Tech-Georgia game.

With preseason camp scheduled to start in a few days, the possibilit­y of playing games seemed as close as it has been since mid-March.

However, three public health experts in the state of Georgia aren’t optimistic for a variety of reasons, including the continued spread of the coronaviru­s and potential fissures within the testing system designed to ensure that only players free of COVID19 can take the field.

“The athletes can do everything right; the coaches can do everything right, but when the community spread around them is so high, that bubble just isn’t going to stand up,” said Travis Glenn, a professor of environmen­tal health science at the University of Georgia. “It just isn’t. So that’s the problem.”

The rate of community transmissi­on is an initial concern.

“I think I was much more hopeful earlier in the year (for college football), that we would have a little bit more manageable control,” said Christina Proctor, a clinical assistant professor and colleague of Glenn’s in the College of Public Health at UGA. “And now that things have gotten worse, I’m very worried that it’s not going to happen. And I’m an avid fan.”

Test positivity — the percentage of COVID-19 tests that come back positive — is one marker that explains her pessimism. A higher rate indicates either that the virus is spreading or that testing hasn’t been widespread enough — meaning that people who unknowingl­y have the virus are infecting others — or both. The World Health Organizati­on advocates a rate of 5% in order for restrictio­ns to be relaxed. Nationally, the seven-day moving average as of Saturday was 8%, according to data collected by Johns Hopkins University.

Earlier in the summer, the positivity rate in Georgia dropped below 5%, according to the same data. However, as the state has reopened and health measures such as mask wearing and social distancing have not been followed completely, the state’s seven-day rolling average was at 13%. It was 19% in Alabama and Florida, 16% in South Carolina and 6% in North Carolina.

“(The rate in Georgia) is higher than most people should feel comfortabl­e sending their children to school, and that’s the same kind of scenario where people should be uncomforta­ble that they’re going to be able to keep their athletes in a bubble that’s going to last,” Glenn said. “That bubble is going to get pierced.”

Concerns about community spread are heightened given that football players will be on college campuses, where tens of thousands of students will gather from disparate locations.

Glenn acknowledg­ed that athletic department­s and coaches can limit their athletes’ exposure to a great deal, for example by encouragin­g them to enroll only in online courses and mandating mask usage.

However, “these are 18- to 22-year-olds that are going to see other people,” he said. “They just are. And so that’s what’s going to make it really, really hard.”

Rutgers placed its entire football team in a 14-day quarantine last month when several team members tested positive for COVID-19. Players’ attendance at an on-campus party was the culprit, according to an NJ.com report.

“I think we’re going to see outbreaks on college campuses in the fall,” said Zach Binney, an epidemiolo­gist at Oxford College of Emory University. “The football teams are not going to be fully insulated from that.”

Another concern is the testing guidelines by the NCAA, developed with multiple medical groups. The guidance recommends that athletes, coaches and support staff must be tested within 72 hours of competitio­n, such as Wednesday before a game on Saturday, a protocol that the ACC will incorporat­e.

Binney cautioned of the possibilit­y of a player contractin­g COVID-19 on a Tuesday and then taking the test Wednesday before the virus has incubated. By Thursday or Friday, the player becomes contagious, but, with a negative test result, continues to practice and is cleared to play on Saturday. In that scenario, he could take part in a game that Dr. Anthony Fauci, the nation’s leading infectious disease expert, called “the perfect setup for spreading” the coronaviru­s.

“If you’re a center, that could spread to your entire offensive line, but it would also spread to the opponent’s defensive line, and that means that they take it back to their campus, so now there’s the risk that you’re seeding new outbreaks around the country from college football,” Binney said. “I’m pessimisti­c about the possibilit­y of college football.”

Football challenges aside, the actual health risks posed to players are also a concern. There is a notion that going forward with the season is worth the risk because college football players are healthy and young, and their health likely won’t be impacted significan­tly. That line of thinking ignores the fact that those players will also be around coaches and staff who are much older, as well as their families, and that many could have potential health risks, such as obesity or asthma.

Also, Glenn noted, there’s much about COVID-19 that isn’t known.

He pointed out, for instance, that people infected with the coronaviru­s have often suffered recurring headaches after recovering.

“How long is that going to last?” Glenn asked. “We don’t know. So that to me is probably the more realistic ‘What should they be scared of?’ is that they’re going to have an additional set of injuries that they’re going to have to deal with for the rest of their lives.”

It’s possible that teams could make it through the season unscathed or with minimal interrupti­on. But the reality is that it could only take a few individual­s on a few teams to get infected and then practice and play in a game for the season to be severely compromise­d. That’s a long tightrope for a lot of people to walk.

It’s why, in videoconfe­rence interviews last week, Miami Athletic Director Blake James acknowledg­ed that the ACC’s plan for an 11-game schedule is “probably very aspiration­al” and why Pac-12 Commission­er Larry Scott, when asked his confidence level for the season, responded, “I don’t know.”

It’s not a hopeless situation. Testing availabili­ty, accuracy and turnaround time can continue to improve. The safeguards that the NCAA, leagues and schools have put into place appear to be good-faith efforts to protect athletes’ health.

It’s conceivabl­e that the community infection rate can drop to safer levels over the course of the next few months, considerab­ly lowering athletes’ risk of infection both while with their teams and away from them. College football likely can apply lessons learned from MLB and the NFL in coming weeks.

Also, the scheduling models that the ACC, SEC and other leagues have constructe­d clearly were made with the idea that there will be disruption­s.

But it may not be enough, as much or more due to the environmen­t that players will be living in than the game itself.

Proctor said she highly approved of the NCAA’s measures, “but it doesn’t work if you haven’t at least flattened or gotten manageable rates of community transmissi­on, which we are not at currently in Athens-Clarke County. So that’s a real worry.”

SATURDAY, AUG. 1 Cash 3 Midday: Cash 3 Evening: Cash 3 Night:

3-2-7 (Friday) 5-1-9 4-8-0

Cash 4 Midday: Cash 4 Evening: Cash 4 Night:

8-8-7-5 9-2-4-7 6-0-1-9 (Friday)

On the Web: galottery.com 1-800-GALUCKY

Please verify numbers with Georgia Lottery Corp. before claiming a prize.

 ?? HYOSUB SHIN / HYOSUB.SHIN@AJC.COM 2019 ?? With preseason camp set to start in a few days, the chance of playing games seemed as close as it’s been since mid-March. But three public health experts in Georgia aren’t optimistic for a variety of reasons.
HYOSUB SHIN / HYOSUB.SHIN@AJC.COM 2019 With preseason camp set to start in a few days, the chance of playing games seemed as close as it’s been since mid-March. But three public health experts in Georgia aren’t optimistic for a variety of reasons.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States