Los Angeles Times

USC reports ‘alarming increase’ in cases

- By Nina Agrawal

Just one week into fall semester, USC is reporting “an alarming increase” in the number of COVID-19 cases in students among the campus community, according to a Student Health notice sent out Monday.

In the last seven days, 43 cases have been identified and more than 100 students placed in a 14-day quarantine because of exposures, the memorandum from Dr. Sarah Van Orman, chief health officer for USC Student Health, said.

The university is testing students who are symptomati­c and those who have had contact with positive individual­s, as well as some asymptomat­ic students. All of the positive cases were related to students living off campus, the statement said.

“This increase comes despite the continued state and county health guidance that significan­tly restricts in-person instructio­n and on-campus activities for universiti­es located in counties that are on the state’s COVID-19 monitoring list, including Los Angeles County,” Van Orman wrote.

USC resumed instructio­n almost entirely online Aug. 17 and is limiting access to campus. But many students remain in private apartments and houses off campus, where they have reported some parties and gatherings of people from different households, a situation one public heath expert called a “recipe for disaster.”

USC officials have sternly warned students that parties and gatherings are barred, and hosting or attending one could lead to disciplina­ry action, including probation, suspension or expulsion.

And the university has taken substantia­l precaution­s in response to the pandemic, including asking students to take a “daily symptom check” through an app and to make reservatio­ns before setting foot on campus.

Students must also submit to randomly selected temperatur­e screenings once they arrive on campus.

Across the country, universiti­es have scrambled to deal with coronaviru­s outbreaks as students returned for the fall term.

Last week, the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill announced it would pivot to online learning after discoverin­g clusters of cases linked to dorms, a fraternity house and other student housing.

Notre Dame also ceased in-person instructio­n for two weeks after 147 students tested positive within a 14day period. Syracuse University suspended 23 students last week after a large gathering on the campus quad “may have done damage enough to shut down campus,” a vice chancellor said in a statement.

This week, many California State University campuses will resume instructio­n, primarily online, but several universiti­es outside the Los Angeles area expect thousands of students to return to on-campus housing or to private offcampus housing nearby.

Van Orman’s note exhorted USC students on and near campus to follow the six-foot physical distancing guidelines, avoid gathering with people outside their homes, wear face coverings, clean common surfaces frequently, and practice good hand hygiene.

She focused especially on playing games and eating and drinking in proximity — hallmarks of college gatherings, especially at fraternity houses, which have seen outbreaks.

“Every surface, every interactio­n where you share close contact or remove your face covering, can pose a risk to yourself and your friends. Even simple board games involving touching shared objects can become a supersprea­der event,” she emphasized.

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