Anonymous wrote:My kid’s college is still working out their residential plan. However, if my child was symptomatic, I would likely make the trip to pick him up. Yes, that would expose all of us, but we did it with the flu last year and we were fortunate that no one else got it. I would be willing to take that risk to make sure that he had the care he needed.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If they put the sick student in the Covid dorm what will they do with the roommate or other friends? You can’t put students that were exposed but not sick with sick people. You can’t lock them in like the fiasco of the nursing homes and cruise ships.
Related to this point: What are colleges saying specifically about who is in charge of checking on students who are in these campus quarantine dorms? I want to know who would be in daily contact with those students, how often each day, and how? Will anyone see them in person (maybe a health care professional in PPE?) or will everthing rely just on phone calls, texts and Face Timing? Can all students really be relied on to take temperatures etc. and report symptoms accurately if they want to get out of quarantine? I'm skeptical.
All I'm seeing so far is someone will as Notre Dame says, "check in with these students daily" but if a student is sliding from a positive test into actual symptoms, does the college just wait for the student to say "I need the hospital" himself? I picture some students who would try to tough things out and not admit to how sick they feel, and if no one lays eyes on them in person but just "ensures they have access to a delivery service" and a once-daily remote check-in -- I think the colleges are being very trusting that quarantining students is going to go easily and that all students are going to admit to needing help.
Covid can move fast and people can suddenly have extremely low oxygen levels with NO shortness of breath to alert them. (This isn't something I'm making up; look up "silent hypoxia" and the NYT article by Dr. Richard Levitan.) Yeah, yeah, college students are adults as people here love to say over and over. But I just foresee the quarantine dorms possibly having cases where a student doesn't recognize how sick he or she really is, and a remote check-in not detecting it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If they put the sick student in the Covid dorm what will they do with the roommate or other friends? You can’t put students that were exposed but not sick with sick people. You can’t lock them in like the fiasco of the nursing homes and cruise ships.
Related to this point: What are colleges saying specifically about who is in charge of checking on students who are in these campus quarantine dorms? I want to know who would be in daily contact with those students, how often each day, and how? Will anyone see them in person (maybe a health care professional in PPE?) or will everthing rely just on phone calls, texts and Face Timing? Can all students really be relied on to take temperatures etc. and report symptoms accurately if they want to get out of quarantine? I'm skeptical.
All I'm seeing so far is someone will as Notre Dame says, "check in with these students daily" but if a student is sliding from a positive test into actual symptoms, does the college just wait for the student to say "I need the hospital" himself? I picture some students who would try to tough things out and not admit to how sick they feel, and if no one lays eyes on them in person but just "ensures they have access to a delivery service" and a once-daily remote check-in -- I think the colleges are being very trusting that quarantining students is going to go easily and that all students are going to admit to needing help.
Covid can move fast and people can suddenly have extremely low oxygen levels with NO shortness of breath to alert them. (This isn't something I'm making up; look up "silent hypoxia" and the NYT article by Dr. Richard Levitan.) Yeah, yeah, college students are adults as people here love to say over and over. But I just foresee the quarantine dorms possibly having cases where a student doesn't recognize how sick he or she really is, and a remote check-in not detecting it.
Anonymous wrote:^^ You better keep your child home in your bubble.
Anonymous wrote:If they put the sick student in the Covid dorm what will they do with the roommate or other friends? You can’t put students that were exposed but not sick with sick people. You can’t lock them in like the fiasco of the nursing homes and cruise ships.