The News-Times

Universiti­es in state mixed on stance toward COVID vaccine

- By Ignacio Laguarda Staff writer Amanda Cuda contribute­d to this report. ignacio.laguarda @hearstmedi­act.com

Matriculat­ing at public schools or universiti­es means getting up to date on your immunizati­ons, from measles to mumps to meningococ­cal.

But could the COVID-19 vaccine be next on the back-toschool list? At Wesleyan University, the answer is yes.

The private university in Middletown announced Tuesday that students must be vaccinated against the coronaviru­s before the start of the fall semester.

“With all students fully vaccinated before Arrival Day in the fall, our campus community will be closer to achieving much-desired herd immunity. This will also improve our chances of enjoying a more ‘normal’ semester,” said a letter to students from dean of students Rick Culliton and medical director Tom McLarney.

Spokespeop­le from the University of Connecticu­t and Yale University, however, said neither educationa­l institutio­n will make the vaccine a requiremen­t for students.

Meanwhile, both Western Connecticu­t State University in Danbury and Sacred Heart University in Fairfield are undecided on whether to mandate the vaccine. Spokespeop­le from each said they would make a final determinat­ion based on input from the state Department of Public Health.

UConn spokeswoma­n Stephanie Reitz said that’s not expected to change in the near future at the state’s largest college, with multiple campuses in Connecticu­t.

“Like many other colleges and universiti­es, UConn does not require people to receive vaccines of any type that are unlicensed, including those developed for COVID-19,” she said. Vaccines against COVID-19 are approved only for emergency purposes by the U.S. Food and Drug Administra­tion and are not yet fully licensed.

Reitz, who responded in an emailed statement, said, “Any changes would only occur in close collaborat­ion with the state Department of Health and local health districts.”

Karen Peart, director of media relations for Yale, said the COVID vaccine will not be mandated for this fall, but the private university is encouragin­g students to get it.

“Yale has capacity to vaccinate our community, but we are limited by the supply we receive,” she said, in an emailed statement. “We have let our students know that when they become eligible, they should sign up to receive a vaccine at Yale and at state entities. There has been no decision yet about mandating vaccines for next term.”

More and more universiti­es and colleges across the country have announced they will require students to be vaccinated with one of the COVID-19 vaccines before the beginning of the fall semester.

Those institutio­ns include Duke University, University of Notre Dame, Syracuse University, Cornell University and Rutgers University, to name a few.

Reitz said that while UConn will not require the vaccine, it is strongly urging employees and students to get vaccinated.

“Having high vaccinatio­n rates will greatly affect UConn’s ability to successful­ly reopen for the fall semester with a large variety of inperson classes, higher density in residence halls, and more typical workplace conditions than we currently have,” she said.

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