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Morning Briefing

Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations

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Monday, Nov 16 2020

Full Issue

Back To College After Thanksgiving? Not Without A Test, NC State Says

Although many universities require that students get tested for COVID before leaving campus for the long holiday weekend, some schools are also turning their attention to the post-holiday headache.

AP: N.C. State Requiring COVID-19 Test Before Return To Campus

Students, faculty and staff at North Carolina State University will be required to show proof of a negative COVID-19 test before returning to campus in the spring. The school announced the new policy Friday, WNCN-TV reported. The decision comes after more than 1,000 cases forced the school to move mostly to remote classes during the fall semester. (11/15)

San Diego Union-Tribune: San Diego Universities Will Increase Testing For COVID-19 After Thanksgiving 

A new surge of coronavirus infections is sweeping the nation, just as San Diego colleges prepare to send students off for the Thanksgiving holiday. UC San Diego urged students to get tested before leaving to avoid unwittingly spreading the virus. After the holiday, UCSD and San Diego State University will begin testing many of its students weekly, rather than bi-weekly, for COVID-19 to help slow transmission. The schools were working out the details on Friday. (Robbins, 11/15)

Texas Tribune: Few Texas Universities Require COVID-19 Precautions Before Students Head Home 

Most major universities in Texas are shifting the rest of the fall semester online after Thanksgiving so students avoid traveling back and forth, limiting exposure of the virus. But few of those universities — some of which have been identified as coronavirus hot spots — have explicitly encouraged students to quarantine for 14 days before Thanksgiving or required exit testing, despite staggering rises in case counts across the state and country. (McGee, 11/16)

NPR: College Students Home For The Holidays: How To Keep Families Safe From COVID-19 

Sandy Kretschmer imagines her son Henry returning home from college, dropping his bags and then giving her a big hug. But she knows the reality of this homecoming may be a lot different. "I'll probably have a mask on, and he'll have a mask on when I hug him," she says. Henry plans to take a COVID-19 test a few days before he leaves Iowa State University where he's a junior, and he'll self-quarantine until he heads home to Chicago. (Nadworny and Noguchi, 11/14)

The New York Times: How Can My College Student Come Home Safely For Thanksgiving? 

College students and their parents face a daunting challenge this Thanksgiving: How can students go home for the holiday without bringing the coronavirus with them? The logistics of Thanksgiving break in the midst of a pandemic are tough. College campuses have emerged as hotbeds of infection in some parts of the country, accounting for more than 252,000 infections and at least 80 deaths. While students are at relatively low risk for complications related to Covid-19, the worry is that an asymptomatic student could unknowingly bring the virus home to vulnerable family members. (Parker-Pope and Halpert, 11/13)

The Hill: 38 Percent Of Americans Planning On Having Thanksgiving Dinner With 10 Or More People

About 40 percent of U.S. residents say they plan to gather in groups of 10 or more people this holiday season, according to a recent survey from Ohio State University (OSU) Wexner Medical Center. Nearly 33 percent of respondents said they would not require friends or family to wear masks at Thanksgiving gatherings, and 25 percent said they would not practice social distancing, according to the poll. (Deese, 11/14)

In other higher-education news —

The Washington Post: International Student Enrollment Falls Sharply During Coronavirus Pandemic, Survey Shows 

Tens of thousands of international students have paused their plans to enroll in U.S. colleges and universities this fall amid the novel coronavirus pandemic, threatening a key source of revenue for higher education, a new survey shows. The Institute of International Education reported Monday that international enrollment fell 16 percent this fall at more than 700 schools it surveyed. The flow of new international students into U.S. institutions plummeted 43 percent from the previous year. (Anderson, 11/16)

This is part of the Morning Briefing, a summary of health policy coverage from major news organizations. Sign up for an email subscription.
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