Omicron ‘Dropping Like Flies’ In Cornell

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  • Cornell students are scrambling after the university reported hundreds of COVID-19 cases and finally opted to move finals online while cancelling a ceremony it had planned to recognize its December graduates.
  • According to Pollack, while none of Cornell’s infected students has suffered a severe illness, signs of Omicron’s higher transmissibility could lead to “exponential growth” in cases.
  • At least one friend who was supposed to fly home for the holidays isn’t sure if she will be able to after a friend tested positive, he said.

Students at Cornell are scrambling after the institution reported hundreds of COVID-19 instances and decided to move finals online while cancelling a ceremony to honour December graduates as reported by Daily Beast.

Alert level red

“It’s kind of feeling like people are dropping like flies a little bit,” a sophomore at the school, Maral Asik, 19, told The Daily Beast. 

“Like testing positive or getting contact traced.”

The university moved its main campus “Alert Level Red” for the first time in three semesters on Tuesday and President Martha Pollack issued a letter to students announcing that the university would move final exams to an online format while cancelling events and encouraging students to avoid nonessential contact with others before their return home.

“It is obviously extremely dispiriting to have to take these steps.

However, since the start of the pandemic, our commitment has been to follow the science and do all we can to protect the health of our faculty, staff, and students,” Pollack wrote.

Omicron 

According to Pollack, while none of Cornell’s infected students has suffered a severe illness, signs of Omicron’s higher transmissibility could lead to “exponential growth” in cases.

Asik said she now knows “at least five or six people” who have tested positive, and still others who are “checking the testing portal every ten minutes for results,” but it’s been overwhelming to figure out which friends have been infected.

It’s become routine over the past week to find herself tangled in conversations about testing status: “It’s been like ‘Oh, did you hear this person tested?’

If I’ve interacted with you in the past 24 hours, just like be careful.”

“Another friend will be quarantining for two weeks and staying on campus through Christmas after receiving a positive test earlier this week”, she said.

She had initially planned to take a bus home, but that now feels “too risky.”

Cautious enough

Before the spike was announced last week, Asik said she had learned at least “two or three times” that she had been in a car with someone who later tested positive.

She plans to take daily COVID tests until she returns home and is frightened by the idea of not getting home at all if she tests positive in the coming days.

Until her parents arrive, the 19-year-old is leaning on a pod of two friends from her dorm who socialize with just each other, getting takeout from the dining hall to eat in the dorm kitchen together.

“We’ve been through all of this before, it’s just we didn’t think that it would happen again.”

Another sophomore at the school, Rory Confino-Pinzon, 19, said he believed the university hadn’t acted quickly enough to move exams online, adding that the surge “scared a lot of us.”

“They sort of failed the student body by not being cautious enough,” he said.

Testing positive

Confino-Pinzon, who drove four hours home to New York City on Sunday, said that his final week on campus had riddled him and friends who were concerned and “not wanting to get sick but not knowing if we had already been exposed.”

“I was concerned that I was going to get the virus, not know it, and then just bring it home to my dad who has lupus and if he got COVID it would be bad for him,” he said.

He was relieved to test negative on Thursday but has friends who haven’t been as lucky.

At least one friend who was supposed to fly home for the holidays isn’t sure if she will be able to after a friend tested positive, he said.

Both Asik and Confino-Pinzon pointed fingers at students heading back to campus after the Thanksgiving holiday for the spike, noting that there had not been arrival testing designated for students by the university.

Getting tested

“If I had to guess I’d say that’s probably why we have a spike right now, is people bringing back illness from wherever they were before,” Asik said, adding that instead of getting tested immediately after she got back to campus she received routine surveillance testing—which happens once weekly for most students—after two days of in-person classes.

According to Pollack, the university’s COVID-19 testing lab found evidence of the “highly contagious” Omicron variant in a “significant number” of positive student samples.

While it remains unclear how often cases of the Omicron variant lead to hospitalizations or deaths, other colleges are taking similar steps.

Princeton University announced that beginning Dec. 16, it will host final exams online and mandate boosters for all students, faculty, and staff in advance of the spring semester.

A growing pool of other institutions—including Middlebury College in Vermont, DePaul University in Chicago and Southern New Hampshire University—said this month they would temporarily move to remote instruction.

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Source: Daily Beast