UC San Diego to begin mass testing students for the novel coronavirus.
Program will begin with 5,000 currently in campus housing
UC San Diego Chancellor Pradeep Khosla said Tuesday the university is going to begin mass testing students for the novel coronavirus as a major step toward resuming on-campus courses in the fall.
The school’s experimental “Return to Learn” program will begin May 11 when UCSD starts giving self-administered tests to 5,000 students who are currently living in campus housing. The testing is voluntary; students must opt in.
If the program works, UCSD officials plan to test roughly 65,000 students, faculty and staff on a monthly basis.
UCSD will become the first campus in the University of California system and one of the first in the U.S. to broadly test students for the coronavirus — an undertaking it is well-suited to do. It operates UC San Diego Health, which includes two major hospitals and many clinics, all which are tied to one of the largest medical research programs in the U.S.
“This effort will leverage the ingenuity and expertise of our clinicians, molecular biologists, epidemiologists, bioinformaticians, and others to work toward a tailored map of where the virus is, and where it isn’t,” Khosla said in a statement.
“We expect these efforts to help put us in the best possible position to minimize virus outbreaks and implement new interventions as needed, should we resume in-person activities this fall.”
Like other schools, UCSD was forced to shift to online classes in March and April as the novel coronavirus spread. The shift has been unpopular with many students, some who say that in-person classes offer a much richer learning experience. Students also don’t like paying full tuition for online classes.
The change is causing financial devastation.
Khosla said last week that the COVID-19 pandemic has cost UCSD $150 million so far, and that it is likely to cost an additional $200 million to $300 million by the end of the summer.
Some of the losses stem from the refunds UCSD had to issue to students who lived in campus housing. At the start of the fall quarter, about 15,000 students lived on campus — a figure that
Khosla says could drop below 13,000 this fall due to social-distancing rules.
The school — which has been experiencing unprecedented growth for more than a decade — also could lose enrollment due to the public’s fear of the virus. UCSD began the fall quarter with nearly 39,000 students, a record.
The Return to Learn pilot program, which will cost about $500,000 over two months, is meant to address that anxiety.
UCSD said Tuesday that it will initially give 5,000 undergraduate and graduate residential students nasal swab-based coronavirus tests, and that it will check housing wastewater and surface collections for signs of the virus.
Students “will go to one of several designated sites on campus to pick up a clean nasal swab in a specimen collection container,” UCSD said in a statement. “Using a downloaded barcode-reader app on a smartphone, the participant will scan the unique barcode on the container, linking their cellphone number to the specimen and generating a time stamp.
“The participant will then swab the inside of their own nose, drop the swab in the container and leave it in a collection box to be picked up by program coordinators. The swabs will be tested for the novel coronavirus, SARS-COV-2, at the Center for Advanced Laboratory Medicine at UC San Diego Health.”
The university expects to produce test results within roughly 24 hours. Campuswide testing could begin in early September if the program works.
If a person tests positive, the student will be notified and referred to a public health team that will determine whether the participant has been in close contact with other people, UCSD said. An infected student who is shedding the virus will be given dedicated campus housing where he or she can self-isolate until no longer infectious.
“My instinct tells me that the more that people understand how this is managing the risk of spread, the more they will be able to manage their own anxiety,” Khosla told The San Diego Uniontribune late Tuesday.
“I’m sure a lot of people are going to be thinking about this, what would cause them concern. There will be questions. We have thought about many of the issues but clearly not all of the issues.”
gary.robbins@sduniontribune.com