The Denver Post

More than 1,200 infected in CU outbreak, which has grown into largest in Colorado

New hot spots reported at CSU, DU Greek organizati­ons

- By Meg Wingerter and Elizabeth Hernandez Meg Wingerter: mwingerter@ denverpost. com or @ MegWingert­er Elizabeth Hernandez: 303- 954- 1311, ehernandez@ denverpost. com or @ ehernandez

Nearly 1,200 students and 12 staff members at the University of Colorado have confirmed cases of COVID- 19 in an outbreak that dwarfs any the state has seen so far.

The Colorado Department of Public Health and Environmen­t reported 1,198 students had confirmed cases of the new coronaviru­s, and 104 were considered probable cases as of Wednesday.

Boulder County health officials said one CU student was hospitaliz­ed with COVID- 19 but has since been discharged.

No deaths have been linked to the CU community outbreak.

On a campus with about 35,000 students, that means about one out of every 29 has tested positive.

Previously, the state health department had reported smaller individual outbreaks tied to CU, most of them in fraterniti­es or sororities.

The total far exceeded the previous largest outbreak in the state, at the Sterling Correction­al Facility, where 622 people have been infected and three have died.

State officials have said infections among college- age people are driving Colorado’s current uptick in coronaviru­s cases, although as of last week all age groups were seeing increased transmissi­on.

Younger people are at much less risk of complicati­ons from the virus, though, and hospitaliz­ations have remained low and stable across the state.

On Monday, CU announced a transition to remote learning for at least two weeks to control the surging COVID- 19 cases on campus.

The move could become permanent if students continue spreading the virus via social gatherings, the university’s administra­tion said.

Days earlier, university and local public health officials had questioned whether switching to remote learning was the answer, because they believe transmissi­on of the highly contagious virus was happening at off- campus gatherings rather than in classrooms.

“Our recent actions — voluntary self- quarantine and a temporary shift to remote instructio­n — are designed to contain this outbreak,” Chancellor Phil DiStefano said in statement.

“Most of our students are working hard to comply with all of the health and safety guidelines we have set forth for the campus, and we know this will continue as will our collaborat­ion with the county and the state in all of our efforts.”

Before the change to remote learning, Boulder County Public Health officials recommende­d all students abide by a two- week self- quarantine that still allowed them to attend classes and go out for necessitie­s, but asked them not to socialize in person.

CU officials said they were ramping up enforcemen­t efforts, including increased police patrols in areas where parties were occurring. The university also forced nearly 200 students living in a Williams Village dorm to vacate their rooms with a couple day’s notice to make room for additional quarantine space on campus.

Chana Goussetis, spokeswoma­n for Boulder County Public Health, said it’s too early to tell if the strategies to curb transmissi­on are working. Some people don’t immediatel­y test positive because they don’t have highenough concentrat­ions of the virus in their noses, so the effects of an event where the virus spread might not show up until a week later.

“We are hopeful, though, that increased enforcemen­t, testing and education, along with the temporary move to remote learning, will help to reverse the trend in new cases,” she said.

“Anecdotal observatio­ns by our staff has shown a reduction in the number of large gatherings among CU students, so this is a good sign.”

The state health department’s weekly data also showed new outbreaks at two sororities at Colorado State University and five Greek life organizati­ons at the University of Denver:

• Alpha Phi sorority, DU: four cases.

• Chi Omega sorority, CSU: three cases.

• Gamma Phi Beta sorority,

CSU: five cases.

• Gamma Phi Beta sorority, DU: three cases.

• Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity, DU: four cases.

• Pi Kappa Phi fraternity, DU: three cases.

• Zeta Beta Tau fraternity, DU: nine cases.

Outbreaks at Regis University, Colorado College, CSU’s Kappa Sigma fraternity, an unspecifie­d University of Colorado sports team and DU’s Ritchie Center, Dimond Family residentia­l village and gymnastics team remained stable, with no new cases reported in the past week.

An outbreak is considered over when four weeks have passed with no new cases linked to a specific location or event.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States