These places will be struck with a second wave of Covid, experts to warn
Potential tip in new cases can be too much for these locations.
To say that the coronavirus pandemic has strengthened daily life would be the launch of the Millennium. And while not able to be able to dine in your favorite restaurants, take a drink in your favorite bar or sweat to your local gym can be minor disadvantages that we all deal with, there is no doubt Nothing too much affected as schools and colleges. Now, as summer came down and students across the United States startPlan a return on campuses filled with uncertainty,Some medical experts begin to warn that the collegiate cities of an ocean to the coast will probably be affected by a second wave of COVID cases.
According to experts, the return of a large number of students from all over the nation presents an obvious and immediate danger of spreading coronavirus - especially smaller towns with fewer health infrastructures that are home to many major colleges and universities, the reports of the penis. And with many of these places welcoming the out-of-campus housing students, restaurants, grocery stores and public services for the first time since the pandemic in March, the possibilities of new epidemics are high.
Despite the fact that many schools are currentlyWelcoming a lot less students for the new academic yearThere are already evidence that the reopinitions have an effect. "What is really worrying right now, many academic cities are already - even as they start to repopulate - show an important evidence of increased transmission"David RubinDirector of the Pennsylvania Children's Hospital (HOP) Policylab, told the comma. "I'm worried about what I see already. What happens when they repop completely?"
According to Policylab data, smaller counties that house larger colleges and universities havealready started to stand out in data, with points reported in South Bend, Indiana (House of Notre-Dame) and Ann Arbor, Michigan (House of the University of Michigan). In fact, a survey conducted byThe New York Times found that there were already 6,600 new coronavirus cases that could beBack to campus in college At the end of July, the largest number of students came back.
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Some universities have already faced major planning decisions, thanks to COVID. The University of Carolina of North Chapel Hill announced on August 17 that it would beMove your classes entirely online For the semester, when about 130 students have been tested positive for coronavirus after their return to campus. The analysis of the tests between 954 students and five faculty members showed a 13.6% positivity rate for the virus.
Although most universities take precautions by limiting the occupation of the dormitory and the size of the class, others point out that there is only as long as you can do when smaller cities are taken over by the students. "The university does not govern what happens off campus"Juan Marquez, Medical Director in Ann Arbor Washtenaw County, told the cerege. "They can only do a lot." And for more places in difficulty with COVID, checkThis state is about to return to the lock, the governor warns.