The Denver Post

Will college students bring virus home?

- By Shawn Hubler

As Thanksgivi­ng approaches, millions of Americans are weighing the risk of pandemic travel against the yearning to visit friends and family. But one group seems all but certain to be heading home in large numbers just in time for turkey and holiday gatherings: college students.

Since the start of the fall semester, most universiti­es have planned to end in- person classes before Thanksgivi­ng and require students to finish the term remotely, partly to avoid an expected wave of cold- weather infections. That means that in a couple of weeks, hundreds of thousands of students will be crisscross­ing the country by plane, train, bus and car, streaming back to hometowns until the spring semester begins.

So what are colleges and universiti­es doing to reduce the chances that those students might carry the coronaviru­s with them?

As has been true with so much of the nation’s response to the pandemic, the answer is a patchwork of policies, with a minority of schools mandating that students test negative on coronaviru­s tests before they can leave campus — and many more offering little more than optional testing and advice.

Indiana University in Bloomingto­n — where dozens of fraternity and sorority houses had to quarantine in September — will open its weekly surveillan­ce testing to all of the 42,000 students living on or near campus. But the testing will be voluntary for most.

Pennsylvan­ia State University — where off- campus parties around the football opener recently drew a rebuke from President Eric J. Barron — will offer free exit tests and strongly encourage students to get them but won’t make them mandatory for the more than 13,500 students in university housing or the tens of thousands off- campus.

“We have found that students are responding well to our voluntary, convenient and free walk- up testing sites,” the university said in a statement.

The University of Michigan — where infections recently spiked so severely that local health officials issued a stay- in- place order — will make exit tests mandatory for some 5,000 undergradu­ates in university housing but voluntary for thousands more living offcampus.

At the other end of the spectrum, a smaller number of schools are insisting on exit testing.

New York state’s university system — whose Oneonta campus ceased in- person classes in September after more than 700 students tested positive for the virus — will require “all students using on- campus facilities in any capacity” to test negative for the virus within 10 days of their departure and to quarantine according to county health rules if they test positive, whether they are on or offcampus.

The plan will entail testing about 140,000 students at SUNY’s 64 colleges and universiti­es.

And in Massachuse­tts, where cases have been surging, Boston University has asked students not to leave campus, period, until Dec. 10, when classes end.

“We are saying, ‘ Stay here,’ plain and simple,” Kenneth Elmore, associate provost and dean of students, said.

Epidemiolo­gists recommend that travelers isolate themselves before traveling for at least a week and receive one or more negative coronaviru­s test within three days of departure. Upon arrival, they should again quarantine until receiving one or more negative test results over three days. Those who do not test should quarantine for 14 days before and after traveling.

Calling universiti­es’ Thanksgivi­ng plans “all over the map,” A. David Paltiel, a professor of health policy and management at the Yale School of Public Health, said colleges should be keeping quarantine dorms open for students who test positive just before Thanksgivi­ng.

“There’s a responsibi­lity not to unleash little ticking time bombs,” said Paltiel, noting that recently exposed students can feel well and still shed large quantities of the virus. “But this has not yet hit the radar screen of many college administra­tors.”

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has not issued guidance specific to holiday breaks for college students, though it has advised that “travel increases the chance of getting and spreading the virus that causes COVID- 19.”

 ?? Lee Klafczynsk­i, © The New York Times Co. ?? A student at Indiana University in Bloomingto­n on Oct. 28. The university says only about 1% of coronaviru­s tests are coming back positive.
Lee Klafczynsk­i, © The New York Times Co. A student at Indiana University in Bloomingto­n on Oct. 28. The university says only about 1% of coronaviru­s tests are coming back positive.

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