UNC is just one of many universities across the US experiencing outbreaks just days after students started returning to campuses. Indiana’s University of Notre Dame was forced to announce yesterday that all undergraduate classes will be remote for the next two weeks as it tries to get its own recent spike in cases under control.
The World Health Organization said yesterday young people are “increasingly driving” the pandemic.
“Many are unaware they’re infected with very mild symptoms or none at all. This can result in them unknowingly passing on the virus to others,” said WHO official Takeshi Kasai.
The pandemic has fundamentally changed higher education. More than 75% of the country’s 5,000 colleges are expected to be partially or fully online this fall, according to a count by the Chronicle of Higher Education.
Scott Galloway, a professor of marketing at New York University who opposes high tuition costs, believes students are right to be outraged. “Universities have backed themselves into a corner,” he told CNN. “We have raised tuition on average 2 1/2-fold over the last 20 years. I think Covid-19 was just the straw that broke the camel’s back, where families across America are saying, ‘Enough already. We’re not going to pay $58,000 for Zoom classes.'”
YOU ASKED. WE ANSWERED
Q: Should I get a flu shot in the fall?
A: Getting the flu vaccine this year is particularly important this year, experts at the World Health Organization said yesterday.
Covid-19 hit the northern hemisphere as many places were coming out of flu season, according to Dr. Bruce Aylward, a senior adviser at WHO. A lot of the surge capacity used to manage critically sick Covid-19 patients initially came from resources available from dealing with the flu, he said.
“That highlights the reason it’s so important to get the flu vaccination rates up this year, even relative to previous years,” said Aylward. “We need that capacity potentially to manage Covid.”
You also want to avoid having a personal double whammy of getting both flu and Covid-19. And yes, it is possible to have both at the same time.
WHAT’S IMPORTANT TODAY
A historic mental health crisis
The organization’s director Dr. Carissa Etienne said yesterday the US and Brazil were “the biggest drivers of the case counts” and warned the pandemic is causing a historic mental health crisis.
Strict lockdowns and restrictions have reduced the resources available for mental health support. Many people are turning to alcohol and drugs to cope with the pandemic, causing them to be more prone to mental health issues, Etienne warned.
Vaccine trials need more minority volunteers
While Black people and Latinos account for more than 50% of Covid-19 cases in the US, so far they make up only about 15% of participants in the nation’s first large-scale clinical trial to test a coronavirus vaccine, according to data obtained by CNN from a government official.
That discrepancy could potentially delay a vaccine from reaching the market. Federal law and National Institutes of Health policy mandate inclusion of minorities into clinical trials because vaccines and drugs might have a different effect on them than they do on White people.
Los Angeles schools launch huge Covid-19 testing program
Australia strikes vaccine deal, but jab won’t be mandatory after all
One solution to slow testing: Sewage
The US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is not too shy to look at poop in order to slow down the spread of the coronavirus. Studies have shown the virus can be found in feces from people who are sick and also from people who don’t yet have Covid-19 symptoms. Since about 80% of US homes are connected to some kind of municipal sewer system, sewage can become a great tool to track the spread of the disease across the nation.
The CDC is hoping its new sewage monitoring program will complement America’s still-inadequate testing and contact-tracing, giving a good big picture of how widespread the infection is and giving communities a few extra days to prepare for surge capacity in hospitals or to make lockdown decisions.
ON OUR RADAR
- A Black medical student is working the front lines of the pandemic at the same hospital where he once was a security guard.
- France will make face coverings mandatory in enclosed shared office spaces starting September 1. Masks will not be compulsory in individual offices “as long as there is only one person present.”
- The New York Police Department has created a new Asian Hate Crime Task Force after an increase in racist attacks against Asian Americans during the Covid-19 pandemic.
- Boeing plans more job cuts on top of 16,000 announced this spring.
- The South Korean capital Seoul will seek damages from the church at the center of a fresh outbreak. The city says the church wasted its resources and complicated tracing efforts through “falsehood and noncompliance.”
- The US stock market just hit its first record since the pandemic started, meaning the 2020 bear market is officially over. The S&P 500 climbed higher on a combination of unprecedented fiscal and monetary stimulus in response to the pandemic, as well as hopes for a swift economic rebound.
TOP TIPS
Take your vacation days before you regret it
TODAY’S PODCAST
The virus does travel beyond the six feet. But the greatest intensity of exposure will still happen in close proximity to someone. — Joseph Allen, Director of the Healthy Buildings program at the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health