National Post

Should only the fully vaxxed be allowed back on campus?

- Sharon Kirkey

EVERYTHING THAT WE’RE DOING AS A COUNTRY IS TRYING TO BEAT THIS VIRUS. WE KNOW THAT THE WAY THAT WE CAN DO THAT IS TO GET VACCINATED AND STOP THE SPREAD. — DAVID AGNEW, PRESIDENT

OF SENECA COLLEGE, LOCATED IN THE GREATER TORONTO AREA

Toronto’s Seneca College is finding itself among some of the world’s top universiti­es — Berkeley, MIT, Harvard — with its new coronaviru­s rule: Only those fully inoculated against COVID-19 will be invited back to campus this fall.

While a smattering of other Canadian colleges and universiti­es, most in Ontario, are requiring that students living in residence be immunized, Seneca is making vaccinatio­ns against COVID-19 a condition for students and employees to come on campus for the September term, and not just those moving into dorm rooms.

Exemptions for medical reasons will be respected, with the appropriat­e documentat­ion. The policy doesn’t apply to fully online learning.

“Everything that we’re doing as a country is trying to beat this virus. We know that the way that we can do that is to get vaccinated and stop the spread,” Seneca’s president, David Agnew said. “It was just the right thing to do to continue to protect the health and safety of our community.”

They’re certainly in good company.

“There are now well over 500 colleges and universiti­es in the United States that are requiring vaccinatio­ns to come on campus in the fall, including the entire New York and California public systems,” Agnew said.

As for Canada, “I think we’re the first.”

The policy has been generally well accepted, Agnew said, a sentiment supported by Seneca Student Federation president Ritik Sharma. “We’ve received good feedback from our students as well — they have been very much into it, and getting the vaccine at Seneca,” Sharma said. “They are very much liking this policy.”

No pushback? “Nothing major,” Agnew reported.

“We’re a big community. We have a variety of perspectiv­es. But no, in fact, we’ve probably heard more from outside the community than inside,” including from people in the U.S. with no apparent connection to the college,” Agnew said. “There is obviously an active community that doesn’t like vaccinatio­ns, and isn’t afraid to say so.”

The ultimate path out of COVID hinges on mass vaccine buy-in, University of Manitoba researcher­s recently wrote. But Canada appears to be hitting a complacenc­y wall, with the lowest uptake among the university-age demographi­c, the 18- to 29-year-olds. Some warn that anything that hints of a de facto vaccine mandate risks trampling individual liberty and autonomy, while others argue that it’s astonishin­g more universiti­es in Canada are not requiring vaccinatio­n for on-campus attendance.

There are no mandatory vaccines in Canada. The current COVID-19 vaccines have been granted emergency use authorizat­ion, not full approval, which might make any policy legally shaky. Offer vaccines, urge them and hope people take them, bioethicis­t Arthur Caplan has said, but people are free to say no. According to a World Health Organizati­on policy brief on the ethical considerat­ions and caveats of mandatory COVID vaccinatio­n, “policy-makers should consider specifical­ly whether vaccines authorized for emergency or conditiona­l use meet an evidentiar­y threshold for safety sufficient for a mandate.”

There are some 5,300 colleges and universiti­es in the U.S., meaning only about 10 per cent have some form of vaccine requiremen­ts, though the numbers continue to grow. It’s a bit of a red-state, blue-state story, said University of Alberta’s Timothy Caulfield. In the U.S., the discourse is more polarized, the anti-vaccine community more vocal, said Caulfield, Canada Research Chair in health law and policy at the University of Alberta. “But here in Canada, where you do have soft support, you would think universiti­es would feel more comfortabl­e adopting it.”

COVID vaccines haven’t yet been authorized for children under 12, and no province has indicated it plans to make COVID vaccinatio­ns mandatory for the 12 and older to return to in-class learning.

However, in a “call for arms,” Ontario’s new chief medical officer this week pleaded for the young to get their shots and plug gaps in vaccine uptake. “They are the most social, they’re the most able to propagate the virus back into the communitie­s,” Dr. Kieran Moore said of high schoolers and the college aged.

Ontario Education Minister Stephen Lecce will announce a plan to deliver a “more normal, full-time, in-person learning experience,” the minister’s spokespers­on, Caitlin Clark, said in an email. With over half of people 18 and older having both doses, and nearly 60 per cent of youth 12 to 17 with a single dose, “this gives us an incredible sense of confidence that the communitie­s that our schools are within will be safer,” Clark said.

But some health officials are warning that high vaccinatio­n rates among the university crowd will be critical. COVID is less severe among the young, but the hyper-contagious Delta variant and higher contact rates among young people pose unique risks. Add in congregate living situations (residences) and shared common spaces that make it challengin­g to isolate or quarantine should someone become infected. High, two-dose vaccinatio­n coverage — ideally higher than 90 per cent — of the student population “will be necessary to prevent local outbreaks in the upcoming academic year,” Dr. Lawrence Loh, medical officer of health for Peel Region, wrote in June to University of Toronto officials.

It’s not clear whether campus vaccine “mandates” would improve things, or just embolden the hesitant.

U of T students living in dorms this fall will be required to be vaccinated. Those moving into residence at Western University will be required to receive at least a first dose. Mcgill University has no plans to mandate vaccines, confident it will reach a high level of protection voluntaril­y. While the University of British Columbia “strongly encourages members of the community to get the vaccine,” it won’t be making COVID shots mandatory for students, faculty or staff, because of equity, privacy, human rights and other concerns. The University of Alberta, where 80 per cent of classes will be delivered in person in the fall, also has no plans to request proof of immunizati­on to work or learn on campus, though it “strongly encourages all U of A community members to get vaccinated as soon as they become eligible.”

“How very effete and unprincipl­ed,” University of Ottawa health law professor Amir Attaran wrote in an email. “Would they merely ‘encourage’ their students to install smoke alarms in their residences? I think not.”

Canadian universiti­es either don’t appreciate the effectiven­ess, safety or necessity of vaccines, he said, or lack the courage to mandate their use. “There are no legal barriers to requiring vaccinatio­n as a condition for attendance,” he said. Some schools already do this: Ontario requires children and teens to be immunized against designated childhood diseases, unless they have a valid exemption.

The universiti­es, for their part, say that while they emphatical­ly support the value of vaccines, a softer approach — incentives like raffles, tuition waivers and #Back2gethe­r vaccinatio­n campaigns — is preferable.

As of June 26, 63.7 per cent of the university-age demographi­c — youth ages 18 to 29 — in Canada had received one dose of a COVID vaccine, compared to 80 per cent of 50- to 59-year-olds. Ontario vaccinatio­n numbers released Thursday show 67 per cent of the 18 to 29 age group has received at least one dose; 32 per cent have been double dosed.

Caulfield suspects it comes down to complacenc­y rather than a more vaccine-hesitant kind of stance. “I think that you have these young, healthy individual­s that think it’s not important for them to get vaccinated,” he said. “Perhaps there is hope that carrots are going to win out. But it’s crunch time, and I think we need to think more seriously about sticks. If we’re going to get to herd immunity, this population is relevant.”

University of Manitoba researcher­s who explored the willingnes­s of older teens and young adults to take a COVID vaccine found the most common reasons for those who said “no,” “maybe” or “I don’t know” were concerns around safety (developmen­t was rushed or protocols skipped, some feared), not enough informatio­n about the vaccines and concerns about effectiven­ess. With vaccinatio­n rates appearing to plateau, epidemiolo­gist Raywat Deonandan is more sympatheti­c to Seneca’s vaccine rule than he would have been months ago. “The cost, of course, is that you create some discontent­ment in society. Maybe you lose some goodwill. But we’re at a time crunch here. And if that’s what’s needed to get more vaccinatio­n, so be it.”

There could be a human rights issue, and accommodat­ions need to be made. Seneca has “tonnes” of programs available online, but Agnew acknowledg­ed there are some things you just have to do in person. Seneca has one of Canada’s premier aviation schools. “You can’t train to be a pilot without flying a plane.”

A vaccinatio­n policy undermines the idea that vaccinatio­n is a choice, said Cara Zwibel, director of the fundamenta­l freedoms program at the Canadian Civil Liberties Associatio­n. “If we create enough things that you can’t do without being vaccinated then de facto we end up with a mandatory vaccinatio­n regime, which is not where we think we should be.”

“What is it that we are trying to achieve by doing this,” she said. “Is this about making people feel safer? Is it about liability? Is it about a school being able to say, ‘Well, we took every precaution we could, so if you get sick, we couldn’t possibly be to blame.’”

Online and in-person learning aren’t equivalent options, she said. They aren’t the same kinds of experience­s. “I’m not so sure that there isn’t some coercive element here.”

The risk of COVID-19 transmissi­on in a residence can be significan­t, said Queen’s University infectious diseases specialist Dr. Gerald Evans. Like any household, secondary attack rates are high. Some undergradu­ate first-year courses at Queen’s have 200, 300 students.

There are large auditorium­s to accommodat­e them, “but if there’s a scattered number of people who are infected in that group, there is tremendous risk to everyone else who is in the auditorium, particular­ly those in proximity to the infected person,” Evans said.

He doesn’t see a downside to heavy vaccinatio­n of the university-age crowd. He’s sensitive to the concerns about myocarditi­s, the rare cases of heart muscle inflammati­on that have been linked to the MRNA vaccines, Pfizer and Moderna. However, “it’s transient, it’s low, and it seems to be readily reversible.”

It’s not quite clear how Seneca plans to enforce its policy, which is now being finalized with the advice of legal and public health experts. Of the roughly 30,000 students expected this fall, about one third will have some part of their program on campus, the rest will continue online or some hybrid of the two.

Agnew said they’re taking it a term at a time, as campus gradually reopens more, and while they wait guidance from the province in terms of masking and distancing and health checks for the fall semester.

“I think all of us in post-secondary — all of us in a lot of worlds — are kind of making assumption­s about what the world will look like in September,” he said.

HEARD MORE FROM OUTSIDE THE COMMUNITY THAN INSIDE.

 ?? THE CANADIAN PRESS / FILES ?? As of June 26, 63.7 per cent of the university-age demographi­c — youth ages 18 to 29 — in Canada had received one dose of a COVID-19 vaccine.
THE CANADIAN PRESS / FILES As of June 26, 63.7 per cent of the university-age demographi­c — youth ages 18 to 29 — in Canada had received one dose of a COVID-19 vaccine.

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