Category: Corona Virus

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Pastor accused of defying coronavirus restrictions wasn’t allowed in court because he wouldn’t wear a mask – CNN

September 23, 2020

Through his attorney, Tony Spell on Tuesday entered not guilty pleas to six misdemeanor charges of violating the governor's emergency order by holding large gatherings at his Life Tabernacle Church in Baton Rouge.

Spell was not allowed inside the 19th Judicial Circuit Court in Baton Rouge, because he would not wear a face covering -- which is required to enter the building.

His attorney, Jeff Wittenbrink, was not available to answer questions on Wednesday morning, but did confirm that Spell was not in court.

"We don't get our rights to worship freely from the government we get those from God," Spell said. "We'd rather obey God than man."

Louisiana has had 162,214 confirmed cases of Covid-19 and 5,388 deaths according to Johns Hopkins University Center for Systems Science and Engineering.

Spell's next hearing is scheduled for January 25, 2021.

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Pastor accused of defying coronavirus restrictions wasn't allowed in court because he wouldn't wear a mask - CNN

Donald Trump gives himself an ‘A+’ for his handling of the coronavirus. Uh, what? – CNN

September 22, 2020

"We're rounding the corner," he told "Fox & Friends" of the coronavirus during an interview Monday morning. "With or without a vaccine. They hate when I say that but that's the way it is. ... We've done a phenomenal job. Not just a good job, a phenomenal job. Other than public relations, but that's because I have fake news. On public relations, I give myself a D. On the job itself, we take an A+."

How, you might ask yourself, could this President give himself top marks in handling the pandemic when he had admitted to downplaying the threat it posed to the public, driven skepticism about mask-wearing, pushed unproven (and even dangerous) remedies to deal with the virus and repeatedly underestimated the death toll?

Simple! Trump lives in a fantasy world of his own creation. He always has. In that world, he is the smartest, the savviest, the coolest, the best-looking and the winningest person in the world. Objective facts fall by the wayside in that world. And Trump has always -- whether in the business world or the political one -- surrounded himself with people who affirm that his world is the real one and the actual real one is some sort of conspiracy narrative driven by his "elite" enemies in the Democratic Party and the media.

All of which allows Trump to live in a sort-of bubble. Prior to being elected president, his wealth allowed him to exist in that bubble. Now the security of the White House does the same.

The problem for Trump is that in politics what grade you give yourself matters a whole lot less than the grade the people you need to vote for you give to your performance. And, on that front, Trump is failing.

The disconnect between how Trump sees his handling of the coronavirus and how the public sees it is vast. But again, objective facts play a role here.

Put plainly: There is simply no evidence the country is "rounding the corner" on the virus as Trump suggested Monday. And while Trump is free to give himself whatever grade he wants in how he has dealt with the virus, his constituents disagree. Profoundly.

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Donald Trump gives himself an 'A+' for his handling of the coronavirus. Uh, what? - CNN

Pine-Sol cleaner has been approved to kill coronavirus on hard surfaces – CNN

September 22, 2020

The product was added to the agency's list of products expected to kill the virus after meeting the criteria for use against SARS-CoV-2, the coronavirus that causes Covid-19, an EPA spokeswoman told CNN via email on Sunday. Pine-Sol was tested by a third-party laboratory that showed the disinfectant can kill the virus within 10 minutes of being used on hard, nonporous surfaces, The Clorox Company said in a press release.

"With a long-standing history of being a powerful cleaner and disinfectant, and the trusted brand choice within the Black community, Pine-Sol Original Multi-Surface Cleaner now offers the clean families have trusted through generations with the protection they need right now against the spread of SARS-Cov-2, the virus that causes COVID-19," said Chris Hyder, vice president and general manager of The Clorox Company's cleaning division.

To disinfect against coronavirus, the company said customers should apply full-strength Pine-Sol with a clean sponge or cloth on a surface, wait 10 minutes, then rinse. For heavily soiled surfaces, the company said precleaning to remove excess dirt first is required.

Clorox, the world's largest manufacturer of disinfectant cleaning materials, has 36 other products on the EPA's list of disinfectants for use against Covid-19, including Clorox bleach, disinfecting bathroom cleaner and disinfecting wipes.

CNN's Christina Zdanowicz contributed to this report.

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Pine-Sol cleaner has been approved to kill coronavirus on hard surfaces - CNN

7 People Die From Coronavirus As Another 1477 Cases Reported In Illinois – Block Club Chicago

September 22, 2020

CHICAGO Another seven people were reported to have died from coronavirus in the past day in Illinois.

Among the victims were five people in Cook County. At least 8,457 people have died from coronavirus in Illinois.

Another 1,477 cases were reported, as well, bringing the total up to 275,735. The states positivity rate was at 3.5 percent.

As of Sunday night, 1,436 people were hospitalized with coronavirus in Illinois, including 364 people in the ICU and 153 people using ventilators.

In Chicago, an average of 295 cases are being reported and three people dying per day, increases from last week. The citys positivity rate did fall slightly from last week, though, hitting 4.6 percent Monday.

At least 2,932 people have died from coronavirus in Chicago, and there have been 77,272 confirmed cases.

Block Club Chicagos coronavirus coverage is free for all readers. Block Club is an independent, 501(c)(3), journalist-run newsroom.

Subscribe to Block Club Chicago. Every dime we make funds reporting from Chicagos neighborhoods.

Already subscribe?Click hereto support Block Clubwith a tax-deductible donation.

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7 People Die From Coronavirus As Another 1477 Cases Reported In Illinois - Block Club Chicago

Robert Gehrke: Gov. Gary Herbert failed and now the coronavirus is burning through Utah – Salt Lake Tribune

September 22, 2020

If a wildfire was blazing through the state, threatening the health and lives of thousands of Utahns, what would you do?

Mobilize fire crews? Sound the alarms? Evacuate people? Run air tankers and cut fire lines?

Because nothing is exactly what Gov. Gary Herbert has done for 10 days as COVID-19 has burned through the state.

Really, we could have seen this coming as early as Sept. 1, when the state had four days averaging about 470 new cases, nearly a hundred more each day than our average at that point.

By Sept. 10, it was clear we were in trouble when we registered 656 cases infections that we know were contracted days earlier and testing was actually falling. Sewage monitoring was signaling problems, as well. Provos wastewater system recorded some of the highest levels of the virus to date anywhere in the state on Sept. 8, but the warning was ignored.

In the ensuing week, as case totals climbed at an unprecedented rate, all we got from the governor was a furrowed-brow lecture and praise for our low unemployment rate. The Utah State Fair went ahead as planned, with 6,000 attendees each night, made possible because the governor loosened restrictions in Salt Lake City a week earlier.

On Wednesday, Utah announced 747 cases. On Thursday, it set a new record with 911, and Herbert said at his weekly news conference that he would meet with his advisers and take the next four days to come up with a plan.

The next day, Utah shattered the day-old record, adding 1,117 cases. On Saturday, it was 1,077. Sunday, it was another 920.

No rush, governor. Take your time. Well just wait over here trying our best not to get sick.

The reality is we have a plan several, in fact.

The White House coronavirus task force recommends red zone states implement universal mask requirements, close bars, restrict indoor dining, and educate vulnerable individuals on how to protect themselves.

The states own phased coronavirus response plan, which has gone through multiple iterations, offers clear direction on what restrictions should be in place, most of them similar to the White Houses guidelines like limiting the size of gatherings and indoor dining in certain scenarios, direction that the state has consistently ignored.

The governor has refused to enact any new restrictions. The plans are there. What is missing is a governor with the courage to lead.

In fairness to Herbert, last week when I saw the surge building and warned people to take it seriously, I wrote that government rules and enforcement cant solve the problem. That was stupid. Government cant solve the problem alone, but it has to do something.

Since the alarms sounded Sept. 10 up through Sunday, we have recorded 7,753 new cases. Utah has the seventh highest infection rate in the United States and the fourth highest rate of transmission. Like Utah, the states ahead of us have refused to take steps to limit the spread.

The best time for action was last week. The second best time for action is now. Here are the steps the state ought to take immediately.

Herbert should implement the White House recommendations close bars, restrict occupancy in restaurants, limit the size of indoor and outdoor gatherings, and yes, finally, impose mask requirements in counties with infection rates above 100 cases per 100,000 people per week. As of Sunday, that included Utah, Cache, Millard, Weber, Sanpete, Juab and Wasatch counties, plus Salt Lake, where masks are already required.

Some in Utah County wont like it. Too bad. If it improves public safety, it needs to be done. The absurd alternative from Utah County leaders, according to a FOX 13 report, is to give coupons for goodies to young people wearing masks.

The Utah County sheriff says he wont enforce a mandate. I guess hes fine with his county being engulfed. But enforcement in Salt Lake County has not been a problem. Most voluntarily comply, and that really is the goal.

The state Board of Education should move high schools in hot spot counties online until the spread is controlled. Colleges and universities should do the same.

Infection rates among elementary school students have been low, but the 15-24 age group is driving the COVID explosion, accounting for about 42% of cases. It wont stay confined to that group and has already started to spread to older Utahns who will have to be hospitalized and some of whom will die.

With the full-blown community spread we have among most of the states population, there is nothing schools can do to keep out the virus. The only sensible option is to move education online in those counties the White House considers hot spots Utah, Cache and Salt Lake counties, and probably Weber and Davis, as well.

If we want schools to stay open (which may already be impossible), Monday should be test day for the teachers. A developing testing tactic is to pool samples from large populations with low rates of infection. That way testing is cheaper and easier, especially with saliva testing now available. If the pooled sample comes back positive, individual samples can then be tested.

Young students may be less vulnerable, but teachers are susceptible, and we need to try to keep the virus out of their ranks.

The same tool could easily be deployed to monitor for the virus in college dorms and anywhere else with concentrated populations.

Brace for what is next.

Weve already started to see cases jump up in older populations, and those older populations will get sick and need to be hospitalized. Despite the lull in COVID cases, our intensive care beds are already above 71% full (most of them not with COVID patients).

We dodged a bullet in July when our hospital capacity was threatened and maybe we will again. But we need to be prepared for the worst and have a plan for the flood of patients that is likely to come right as flu season hits full swing.

Do I think the governor will do most of these? Probably not. He wants buy-in from local communities and is paralyzed by the thought of upsetting legislators.

And thats tragic, because while Utah waits for Herbert to muster the courage to lead, we are losing time and COVID is burning through more and more of the state. This will forever be a stain on his legacy.

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Robert Gehrke: Gov. Gary Herbert failed and now the coronavirus is burning through Utah - Salt Lake Tribune

Coronavirus cases linked to long airline flights early in pandemic, studies show – MarketWatch

September 22, 2020

Two small studies conducted in the early stages of the pandemic found a direct link between traveling on a long flight where masks werent required and testing positive for COVID-19.

But one significant caveat is that the studies didnt measure the effects of wearing masks on planes, because they were conducted before major airlines introduced mask mandates.

Additionally, since the studies were conducted in March, many airlines including JetBlue JBLU, -8.77%, Delta DAL, -9.19% and Southwest LUV, -5.80% have blocked off middle seats on flights to create space between passengers. Many major airlines have also introduced other health safety protocols including contactless check-ins and more rigorous pre-flight screenings of passengers for coronavirus symptoms or contact with people who may have the virus.

Related: If airlines keep the middle seat empty due to fears of coronavirus transmission, will air travel become more expensive?

Is coronavirus airborne?

Initially, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said that the main way coronavirus spreads is via respiratory droplets that can infect someone who is within six feet of a person who has contracted the virus.

But the CDC recently altered its guidance to indicate that the virus can spread through the air and therefore could be contracted by inhaling virus-containing air particles. Those are formed when a person who has COVID-19 coughs, sneezes, sings, talks, or breathes, the agency stated.

The agency abruptly removed that language from its site on Monday, stating that it had been posted in error to the agencys official website.

CDC is currently updating its recommendations regarding airborne transmission of SARS-CoV-2 (the virus that causes COVID-19), the CDC website stated as of Monday afternoon.

(The agency did not directly respond to MarketWatchs request for comment.)

That wouldnt be the first time the agency reversed course in a noteworthy manner during the pandemic.

In March, CDC officials said the general public shouldnt wear masks; it later reversed course. And just weeks ago, the agency walked back its recommendation that asymptomatic individuals who have come in contact with someone who has tested positive for the virus dont need to get tested.

The CDC has maintained throughout the pandemic that traveling increases your chances of getting and spreading COVID-19, and that staying home is the best way to protect yourself and others from COVID-19, the CDC states on its site.

Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases for three decades, told MarketWatch in a July interview that he wouldnt be getting on a plane anytime soon, given that, at 79 years old, he is in a risk category

However the CDC says on its website that the novel coronavirus and other viruses do not spread easily on flights because of how air circulates and is filtered on airplanes. But flying remains a concern because social distancing is difficult on crowded flights, and sitting within 6 feet of others, sometimes for hours, may increase your risk of getting COVID-19.

What the new studies showed

One study traced four cases of the coronavirus-borne disease COVID-19 to a 15-hour flight from Boston to Hong Kong on March 9. Two passengers were a married couple who were hospitalized on March 15 after testing positive for the virus. The other two cases were flight attendants, one of whom served the couple during the flight.

Genetic analysis of virus specimens from the four people uncovered a 100% identical genetic sequence, wrote an international group of researchers from the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine and the University of Hong Kong and other institutions, in a peer-reviewed study in Emerging Infectious Diseases, a journal published by the CDC.

Although we cannot completely rule out the possibility that patients C and D were infected before boarding, the unique virus sequence and 100% identity across the whole virus genome from the 4 patients makes this scenario highly unlikely

The researchers concluded that the married couple likely contracted the virus in North America before boarding the plane and transmitted it to the flight attendants (referred to as patient C and D in the study).

Although we cannot completely rule out the possibility that patients C and D were infected before boarding, the unique virus sequence and 100% identity across the whole virus genome from the 4 patients makes this scenario highly unlikely, the researchers wrote. We therefore conclude that these 4 patients belong to the same in-flight transmission chain.

No other cases of coronavirus associated with that specific flight were identified, according to the study. Additionally, the researchers were unable to quantify the virus attack rate on this flight because not all passengers were tested.

A second study, also published in the November edition of Emerging Infectious Diseases, traced 12 cases to one 10-hour flight on March 2 from London to Hanoi, Vietnam. In total 217 people, including passengers and crew, were on the flight.

The 12 people who tested positive for the virus were seated in business class, where the only symptomatic passenger on the flight was also seated, according to researchers from Vietnam and Australia, the majority of whom are affiliated with the National Institute of Hygiene and Epidemiology in Hanoi.

Since all 12 of these passengers were departing directly from the United Kingdom at a time when the country only reported 23 confirmed coronavirus cases, the authors conclude that it is most likely the case that they contracted the virus on the flight

Unlike the prior study, this one did not perform a genetic analysis to confirm identical virus sequences that would verify whether the 12 passengers likely contracted the virus from the symptomatic passenger on the flight.

However, because all 12 of these passengers departed directly from the United Kingdom at a time when the country had only 23 confirmed coronavirus cases, the authors concluded that it is most likely the case that they contracted the virus on the flight.

The risk for on-board transmission of SARS-CoV-2 during long flights is real and has the potential to cause COVID-19 clusters of substantial size, even in business classlike settings with spacious seating arrangements well beyond the established distance used to define close contact on airplanes

Although testing had not been implemented on a large scale nationwide at that time, community transmission in the United Kingdom was not yet widely established, making the presence of multiple persons on board incubating the illness unlikely, the researchers wrote.

Related: Come back, Americans: Calls for urgent U.S.-U.K. air bridge as airlines hit by fresh lockdown fears

The risk for on-board transmission of SARS-CoV-2 during long flights is real and has the potential to cause COVID-19 clusters of substantial size, even in business classlike settings with spacious seating arrangements well beyond the established distance used to define close contact on airplanes, they concluded. As long as COVID-19 presents a global pandemic threat in the absence of a good point-of-care test, better on-board infection prevention measures and arrival screening procedures are needed to make flying safe.

As of Monday, COVID-19, the disease caused by the virus SARS-CoV-2, had infected 31.2 million people globally and 6.8 million in the U.S. It had killed nearly 1 million people worldwide and at least 200,000 in the U.S., according to Johns Hopkins University.

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Coronavirus cases linked to long airline flights early in pandemic, studies show - MarketWatch

Pine-Sol approved to kill coronavirus by EPA – KING5.com

September 19, 2020

The multi-surface cleaner underwent testing from a third-party laboratory which proved it's efficacy with a '10-minute contact time on hard non-porous surfaces.'

WASHINGTON, D.C., USA The multi-surface cleaner Pine-Sol has received approval from the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency to kill coronavirus "on hard non-porous surfaces."

According to a press release from the cleaner, made by Clorox, it underwent testing from a third-party laboratory that proved its efficacy with "a 10-minute contact time on hard non-porous surfaces."

"We hope this new Pine-Sol kill claim will increase access to disinfectants that can help prevent the spread of COVID-19," Vice President and General Manager of Pine-Sol Chris Hyder said in the statement.

Pine-Sol joins a list of 494 products with emerging viral pathogens and human coronavirus claims for use against SARS-CoV-2.

A full list of products that meet EPA's criteria for fighting coronavirus can be found here.

When using any EPA-registered disinfectant, it recommends following the label directions and to "follow the contact time, which is the amount of time the surface should be visibly wet."

More than 6.7 million people in the U.S. have been diagnosed with COVID-19, according to Johns Hopkins University. More than 198,000 people have died.

For most people, the coronavirus causes mild or moderate symptoms that clear up within weeks. But for others, especially older adults and people with existing health problems, the virus can cause severe symptoms and be fatal. The vast majority of people recover.

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Pine-Sol approved to kill coronavirus by EPA - KING5.com

Europe Is Fighting A 2nd Wave Of Coronavirus Pandemic – NPR

September 19, 2020

World Health Organization official Dr. Hans Kluge tells reporters that coronavirus cases are rising in Europe. David Barrett/AP hide caption

World Health Organization official Dr. Hans Kluge tells reporters that coronavirus cases are rising in Europe.

The World Health Organization warned on Thursday that weekly coronavirus case numbers are rising in Europe at a higher rate than during the pandemic's peak in March.

At a virtual news conference, Dr. Hans Kluge, regional director of WHO in Europe, warned, "We do have a very serious situation unfolding before us."

"Weekly cases have exceeded those reported when the pandemic first peaked in Europe in March," he said. "Last week, the region's weekly tally exceeded 300,000 patients."

Wearing a green face mask, Kluge said, "Strict lockdown measures in the spring and early summer yielded good results. Our efforts, our sacrifices paid off. In June, cases hit an all-time low."

Reported cases in Spain, France and the U.K. were in the hundreds in June and July.

However, Kluge said the early September case numbers "should serve as a wake-up call for all of us." He said the numbers reflect more comprehensive testing but also "alarming rates of transmission across the region."

"More than half of European countries have reported a greater than 10% increase in cases in the past two weeks," said Kluge. "Of those, seven countries have seen newly reported cases increase more than twofold in the same period."

"Where the pandemic goes from here is in our hands. ... We have fought it back before, and we can fight back again," he said.

Kluge said quarantines should remain in place.

So far, Europe has seen 4,893,614 confirmed cases, and the death toll is at 216,005 during this pandemic. Spain has the highest number of confirmed coronavirus infections in Europe at 625,651, followed by France at 454,099, the United Kingdom at 384,075 and Italy at 293,025, according to the Johns Hopkins University dashboard.

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Europe Is Fighting A 2nd Wave Of Coronavirus Pandemic - NPR

Coronavirus cases add up at Florida universities. How are they responding? – Tampa Bay Times

September 19, 2020

As college campuses across the nation become the new COVID-19 hot spots, with hundreds of positive cases reported in some places, Florida university officials have not been sounding many alarms.

Aside from Florida State University, where cases are climbing the fastest and president John Thrasher threatened Friday to suspend infected students who continue to socialize, the states biggest campuses have yet to see the huge numbers reported in some other states.

Not that the virus hasnt made inroads.

Young people are the primary drivers of outbreaks in Florida as the recent drop in new COVID-19 cases and deaths begins to stall, according to state data. And while social media posts have documented large gatherings on some campuses, with few sporting masks, officials say they are also concerned about smaller get-togethers in residence halls or students sharing meals in close quarters.

Cases are not something were looking at as a defeat, said Dr. Mike Lauzardo, who leads the University of Floridas Screen, Test & Protect initiative. As expected, when you start to open things up, cases occur. ... Cases are going to go up. Were going to manage and control them.

That effort has taken different forms across the state. Heres a look at the COVID-19 situation at Floridas larger universities, and how those schools are handling cases:

After starting its semester on Aug. 24, FSU has reported 1,182 cases. This week, 64 students were in quarantine or self-isolation in two on-campus residence halls, with an additional 24 students in isolation off-campus.

Since the school started testing on Aug. 2, its positvity rate is 8.49 percent.

During the first week of the semester, 11 people were arrested at a house party held by a banned fraternity. Later, the school limited events and restricted access at Greek houses to residents only. Tailgating before football games, which was initially allowed, is temporarily prohibited.

On Friday, president Thrasher coupled his threat to suspend students with a call to action, saying the behavior of a few is hindering our ability to continue the in-person experience this fall and the traditions we all cherish. The notice followed posts on social media that said students who were asked to quarantine had attended last Saturdays home football game against Georgia Tech.

It just feels like Im kind of realizing a lot of people lack empathy and regard for the greater community we live in, said Molly Lavoie, an FSU sophomore who mostly stays in her off-campus apartment and takes classes online. "Its really frustrating seeing the spike, and nobody seems to care.

A Tampa Bay Times analysis found that 1,731 cases of COVID-19 had been reported in the three zip codes covering the FSU campus and surrounding areas since September 1. That translated to one new case for every 55 people in those zip codes an area of roughly 95,000 residents.

Case records are sometimes initially assigned to where a person was tested before being updated to where they live, so some of the data could change.

Across all of Leon County, cases among 15- to 24-year-olds more than tripled from their prior high in late June. Visits to emergency rooms in the county also have increased this month.

Since the fall semester began on Aug. 24, USF has reported that 165 students and employees including 71 this week have tested positive across its three campuses.

Those cases are self-reported by students, faculty and staff or those who test positive at the Student Health Services Center. The university does not report its positivity test rate, and said it cannot provide that data because it shares its on-campus testing site with Hillsborough County.

Soon, the university will begin testing 10 percent of the on-campus population at random and will provide a positivity rate from that, said Donna Petersen, chair of USFs COVID-19 task force.

University officials declined to provide the number of individuals quarantined on campus facilities. But during a Facebook Live Q & A with parents this week, dean of housing Ana Hernandez said USF had 66 students in isolation in residence halls, a number she said fluctuates with people coming and going every hour.

During the same session, some parents complained that USFs protocols for keeping students under quarantine were lacking, with little or no contact from the university and no food being provided for nearly a day.

Dean of Students Danielle McDonald said that students placed in a residence hall to self-isolate are assigned to a care team, which checks in with them daily and delivers them at least two meals a day.

She also said she is cautiously optimistic about the reopening so far.

I feel like I need to keep knocking on wood every time I say this because I feel like Ill jinx it and well be setting ourselves up for a fall, but it is going well, McDonald said. Its still not easy.

She said each fraternity and sorority signed a pledge to abide by the universitys standards. There have been sporadic reports of large gatherings at off-campus apartment complexes, but McDonald believes she would know if more were taking place. She bases that on social media accounts that shame students who participate in those events, and on information reported through the universitys anonymous tip lines.

We started a little later than some other schools, and theyve seen what can happen if people do not take care of our community," McDonald said.

Petersen added: We dont have big parties or those super spreaders with massive numbers of people."

Since the fall semester began on Aug. 31, UF has reported 693 new student and employee cases. The Student Health Care Center testing site has a 26.6 percent positivity rate.

University spokesman Steve Orlando said last week that 31 students were in quarantine on campus and 23 were in isolation. An additional 81 students were either quarantining or isolating off campus. Most, he said, went home.

In Alachua County, emergency room admissions have remained essentially flat since late August.

Lauzardo, the doctor leading the universitys screening and testing efforts, said the increase was anticipated.

He said in-depth contact tracing, including 30- to 45-minute interviews with each person who tests positive, has allowed the university to learn more about possible points of transmission and adjust its approach to the virus. Lauzardo said not much spread has been detected on campus or in classrooms; instead it has occurred in residence halls and off-campus Greek housing.

We do our best to find where those cases are, he said. "This is something to be managed, not something to be avoided. We lost that ability to avoid it once this virus left China.

The university has reported 199 cases since the semester started on Aug. 24.

Fifteen students were quarantined in residence halls last week, while the majority of those who were told to isolate returned to their permanent residence, the university said.

Dr. Michael Deichen, associate vice president of UCF Student Health Services, said most of the positive cases were coming through noncompliant behavior rather than community spread. Some students, he said, spread the virus by eating near others.

Eating is such an important facet of socialization and something important we all need to do, but people are letting down their guard, Deichen said. Were trying to make sure people understand the risk."

He said the university will begin targeted testing of certain populations first fraternities and sororities, and later other groups such as dining hall employees and residence hall occupants to see if they need to allocate more resources in specific areas.

But Deichen said he expects things to improve, and the university is preparing for how to disseminate a vaccine when it arrives.

Were hopefully in the sixth or seventh inning of this pandemic, he said.

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Coronavirus cases add up at Florida universities. How are they responding? - Tampa Bay Times

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