“We are out of options,” Providence College President the Rev. Kenneth Sicard said Thursday. “If we are not successful, we will have no alternative other than to shut down our campus for the remainder of the fall semester.”
The college moved to remote learning for at least a week, Sicard said Thursday. Indoor and outdoor gatherings and travel to bars, restaurants and neighborhood businesses are not allowed. All students living on campus will be tested for Covid-19 and those living off campus are not allowed to leave their apartments, Sicard said.
Violations will result in “immediate interim suspensions,” the president said.
By Friday evening, the number of Providence College students who had tested positive had risen to about 120 in three days, according to the Rhode Island Department of Health.
The school’s website says just under 5,000 students are enrolled.
And in New York, Gov. Andrew Cuomo directed the State Liquor Authority to keep a closer eye on bars and restaurants where college students tend to gather to ensure they’re following safety protocols.
So far, they’ve found “egregious violations” in several counties, the governor’s office said in a statement.
“With significant outbreaks linked to colleges and universities across the nation, these stepped-up efforts will help keep our students, faculty, staff, and the surrounding communities safe,” the statement said.
New Covid-19 cases tick up
The Providence College president said off-campus students who have tested positive should return home if they can while others will be relocated to campus facility or a hotel room.
But leading infectious disease expert Dr. Anthony Fauci has warned against colleges sending infected students home, saying they could take the virus with them.
“You send them back to their community, you will in essence be reseeding with individuals who are capable of transmitting infection, many communities throughout the country,” he said earlier this month. “So it’s much, much better to have the capability to put them in a place where they could comfortably recover.”
Dr. Darria Long, an emergency medicine physician at the University of Tennessee Health System, said this was due in part to the ways people have changed to prevent spreading Covid-19.
“This is a really good sign of what we as individuals and how our behaviors that we’re taking to reduce Covid can actually impact flu this year,” she said, citing mask-wearing and social distancing.
But people should not become complacent, Long said, and they should still get flu vaccines. According to Long, about four times as many people got the flu vaccine in Australia this year compared to last year.
“If we do those things, then we can impact the flu season,” she said. But we should “not let our guard down.”
Covid-19 haunts college sports
Florida State University’s head football coach Mike Norvell on Saturday announced he had tested positive for Covid-19. Deputy head coach Chris Thomsen will take over Norvell’s duties while he recovers.
“This is unfortunate, but luckily Coach is feeling fine,” said David Coburn, FSU’s athletics director. “We are proceeding with our Covid protocols as we would with any other case. Coach is isolated, and university tracing staff is handling the contact tracing as they normally do. We will continue to test staff and student-athletes as we have been.”
Several dozen Michigan State University student-athletes have tested positive, the school announced Friday. Out of 376 athletes tested between September 7 and 14, 45 tested positive. One of 24 staff members tested positive, the school said.
The AAP’s updated guidance for children and teens who play sports clarified that they should not show symptoms of Covid-19 for 14 days and obtain clearance from a primary care physician before returning to practice and competitions.
“Parents, children and coaches need to make safety protocols a priority,” said Dr. Susannah Briskin, one of the authors of the guidance, said.
The virus hits some communities harder
Communities of color have already been hit much harder by the pandemic in the US.
“American Indians and Alaskan Natives, and African Americans have been hospitalized at rates 3.5 times higher than Whites,” US Surgeon General Dr. Jerome Adams said Thursday.
“Hospitalization rates are three times higher for Hispanics compared to Whites,” he added.
The pandemic, Adams said, has both exploited and exacerbated the health disparities that exist throughout the country and has also highlighted structural conditions that contribute to those disparities.
“Social distancing and teleworking are critical to preventing spread of coronavirus, yet only one in five African Americans and one in six Hispanic Americans have a job that allows him to work from home,” Adams said.
People of color are also more likely to live in “densely packed urban areas” and in multi-generational homes, he said, and take public transportation.
“Combined, these and other factors create a greater risk for spread of a highly contagious disease like Covid-19,” he added.
CNN’s Jason Hanna, Carma Hassan, Lauren Mascarenhas and Amanda Watts contributed to this report.
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