The Saratogian (Saratoga, NY)

RPI details significan­t testing and tracing protocols

- By Record staff

TROY, N.Y. » Students at Rensselaer Polytechni­c Institute are back on campus for the start of the fall semester due to significan­t testing and tracing protocols that have been implemente­d to minimize the risk of COVID-19 transmissi­on, and maximize health and safety.

The return to campus plan is a multifacet­ed effort that the Rensselaer community worked on for months to research, develop, and execute. It leans on the Institute’s technologi­cal expertise and relies on de-densifying the campus, strict social-distancing, masks, and implementi­ng a detailed testing, tracing, and tracking program.

Perhaps the most critical of these pieces is the Institute’s effort to broadly and frequently test for the appearance of COVID-19 infections on campus. The Rensselaer Testing, Tracing, Tracking, Surveillan­ce, and Quarantine/Isolation (T3SQsm) plan requires all students, staff, and faculty who are on campus to be tested regularly. Undergradu­ate students, for instance, are currently being tested twice a week. In all cases, testing results will be available within 24 hours.

“Contact tracing only works if you are able to identify a positive early on,” Dr. Leslie Lawrence, the executive director of Student Health Services explained.

“We think that the science says that we should be doing this, even though it’s certainly a heavy lift,” Lawrence added.

In determinin­g a testing protocol, the Institute relied on informatio­n that the latest studies and models could provide, including models developed by Rensselaer researcher­s.

The science and engineerin­g expertise on campus has also proven to be an invaluable resource, Lawrence said, as the Institute is able to collect samples on campus that are then tested by a team of Rensselaer scientists.

“We had a lab that could do PCR tests, so we have access to that. Most universiti­es do not,” Lawrence remarked.

“That was a huge advantage. We also have a group of scientists who are reviewing, reading, and commenting on each one of these studies about COVID as it comes out, so we can talk through each study,” Lawrence noted.

Lawrence is leading the testing effort with Jonathan Dordick, an endowed chaired professor of chemical and biological engineerin­g at Rensselaer.

Dordick set up a lab along with Elena Paskaleva and Marc Douaisi, senior research scientists at the Rensselaer Heparin Applied Research Center at the Rensselaer Technology Park, to perform RTqPCR testing. RT-qPCR is a reverse transcript­ase polymerase chain reaction that can detect, with exquisite sensitivit­y and selectivit­y, the RNA from the virus that causes COVID-19.

According to Dordick, the team has been meeting its goal of returning results within 24 hours so that effective isolation and contact tracing can occur. The testing lab can process over 1,800 samples per day and expects to double this number by later in September.

“We’re using pool testing followed by deconvolut­ion to identify potential positive individual­s, which will then lead into our contact tracing program,” Dordick said.

“If we get the data within one day, we’re going to stop the vast majority of transmissi­ons. And that’s really our goal, to identify potential positive individual­s, initiate contact tracing, and reduce transmissi­on,” Dordick added.

To aid in contact tracing, Rensselaer health and safety protocols require daily reporting by members of the campus community on their health and their interac

actions. That informatio­n will be used to assist Rensselaer Student Health Center staff and Institute contact tracers in their efforts.

“If we have a positive case, the trackers and tracers will work with us to figure out who they’ve had contact with and make some decisions about what’s the next step for them, whether it’s quarantine or isolation,” Travis Apgar, the assistant vice president for student life and dean of students commented.

“We’ve done extensive work to really plan out which residence halls we use for students to live in, and which residence halls we use for quarantine and isolation, and really coordinati­ng those efforts so we can provide students with a really safe place,” Apgar added.

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