The Oakland Press

U-M to require vaccinatio­ns to live on campus

- By David Eggert

The University of Michigan will require COVID-19 vaccinatio­ns for students who live on its Ann Arbor campus this fall, school officials announced Friday.

President Mark Schlissel said shots will not be mandated for faculty, staff and other students “at this time,” but he strongly encouraged everyone to get vaccinated. The requiremen­t will allow residence halls to operate safely at nearly normal capacity, he said, after there were more than 600 infections in dorms last fall despite a mask requiremen­t and other restrictio­ns.

In the weeks ahead, the university will start to excuse vaccinated students from mandatory coronaviru­s testing. Those who are vaccinated will not have to self-quarantine after being exposed to someone with the virus, as long as those vaccinated students don’t have symptoms.

About 9,700, or 31%, of undergradu­ate students typically live on campus. So do 2,400 graduate students.

“In order for a campus to fully recover from the effects of the pandemic, we need everyone who can be to be vaccinated,” Schlissel said in a Zoom update to the campus community, adding that officials were considerin­g several unspecifie­d vaccinatio­n incentives. Students must provide proof of their vaccinatio­n or an approved ex

emption by mid-July.

Michigan is the second of the state’s 15 public universiti­es to require students living on campus to be vaccinated, joining Oakland.

About 47% of Michigan residents ages 16 and older have received at least one dose, including 33% who are fully vaccinated. The state wants to immunize at least 70%.

Dr. Laraine Washer,

medical director of infection control at Michigan Medicine, said there now is broad access to vaccines, but “we’re in danger of falling short of getting to the level of vaccinatio­n coverage needed to achieve the goal of community immunity that’s really required to beat the virus.” Medical providers, public health experts and others, she said, have a duty to “turn this vaccine hesitancy into vaccine confidence.”

Henry Ford Health System, a network of five hospitals in the Detroit area and

Jackson, for the first time reported a “softening” of vaccine demand at its sites.

The Republican-led state House this week unveiled a higher education budget that attempts to restrict universiti­es from requiring COVID-19 vaccinatio­n as a prerequisi­te for “enrollment or in-person instructio­n.” according to the House Fiscal Agency. The provision could be vetoed or declared unenforcea­ble by Democratic Gov. Gretchen Whitmer if it survives legislativ­e negotiatio­ns. The GOP-controlled

Senate did not propose such language.

The federal government reported Friday that Michigan still had the country’s highest seven-day case rate, but that the rate continued to decline.

The seven-day average of daily cases was about 5,500, down from the third surge’s peak of around 7,000 for several days last week. The number of hospitaliz­ed adults with confirmed infections, which hit a record of more than 4,100 early this week, kept declining as well to about 3,650.

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