It’s the easiest test students will take at Tufts. And they don’t need to study for it.
As many Tufts undergraduates head back to campus, the cornerstone of the university’s array of plans to keep everyone safe is a COVID-19 testing regimen with the ability to detect infection early and minimize the risk of coronavirus spread.
While some colleges and universities are only testing a portion of their students, Tufts is testing all undergraduate students—whether they live on campus or off—as soon as they return to Tufts and twice a week thereafter. That’s the frequency that mathematical modelers have shown makes the most sense among residential and other community populations for catching new cases before they spread widely to others.
Once students set foot on the Medford/Somerville campus, they head to the Gantcher Center, where they’ll take their initial coronavirus test under the observation of a medical professional. It’s self-administered—just swipe a swab in your nose and pop the swab into a tube—and quick. You can watch a video here that shows exactly how it works.
“These tests are super, super easy,” said Josh Hartman, director of residential life and learning. “I’ve taken five of them already.”
Students coming to Tufts from outside the region will quarantine until they have three negative tests—well beyond what Massachusetts requires—to make sure any virus they may have picked while traveling is detected by the tests. They will have to quarantine for up to a week until all three results are in.
Following the arrival and quarantine period of the out-of-region students, Tufts students who come from within the region (that’s Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Vermont, Maine, Connecticut, New York, or New Jersey) will quarantine until they get a negative test result. (All students will get meals delivered by Tufts Dining while they wait for their first test results.)
Local, off-campus students and other early student arrivals to campus have already been through the onboarding process, and have given it their approval.
Ashley Degen, E23, a mechanical engineering major who returned early for her resident assistant training, said the COVID-19 test the state required her to take before leaving Colorado to fly to Massachusetts was pretty uncomfortable. Not so with the tests she has taken at Tufts.
“This one is so much better,” she said. “You blow your nose, you peel out the cotton swab, you swab your nose yourself and put the swab in the bottle. My last test didn’t even take two minutes,” and that included tapping her ID card to automatically print a label for the tube, handing off the vial, and sanitizing her hands on the way out.
Degen said she’s not worried about fitting the twice-weekly surveillance testing into her busy life. Once students are able to schedule their tests through the app that Tufts has developed, she expects it will be easy to get a reminder to stop by a testing site after class. “I just need to plan it into my routine,” she said.
Where she lived in Colorado, she said there were those who took mask-wearing and other precautions seriously, but many who did not. “It was nowhere near the New England level of serious,” she said. “Honestly, I feel safer here.”
Though early in the process, the results thus far have been promising. As of August 20, results of 3,427 tests from across Tufts have been returned and only two asymptomatic positive individuals have been identified, none on the Medford/Somerville campus. Up-to-date information will soon be available to the general public through a dashboard on coronavirus.tufts.edu.
Testing isn’t only for students, of course. Faculty and staff will also be tested regularly, as often as twice a week, according to how often their jobs bring them in close contact with others on campus.
All the testing will not only identify people who need to be isolated and monitored for the care they may need but will also trigger a contact tracing process to notify people who may have been exposed by them. The testing data will also help the university make real-time decisions about campus operations, such as whether to temporarily suspend some in-person classes.
Hartman said he emphasizes to students that routine testing is not about protecting themselves; it is about protecting everyone around them—including, say, dining workers, custodial staff, or neighbors in our host communities.
“A lot of people don't have any symptoms, aren't sick, don't recognize that they've had an exposure, and they're carrying this thing,” Hartman tells them. “You can unwittingly be exposing folks to virus without knowing it. It’s not fair to put other people at risk just because you don’t want to take a test.”
Hartman said he recognizes that testing, social distancing and wearing masks all the time is really challenging for a lot of folks, especially college-age students.
“But on a personal level, I have a lot of faith in the Tufts community,” he said, including not just students but faculty, staff, and visitors. “I have confidence that we all care enough about the world around us that we will take this seriously and that we're all going to hunker down and do what we need to do.”
So far, he has been impressed, not just with how easily students have taken to the testing process, but with their embrace of social distancing rules. “I've seen students sitting out on the President's Lawn with seven to eight feet between them wearing masks and hanging out with each other, and that is totally appropriate,” he said. “I think our students really get it.”
You can read all the details about Tufts’ comprehensive testing program, including how students will isolate should they test positive, at coronavirus.tufts.edu/testing-at-tufts. It’s a key part of Tufts broader effort to protect the safety of members of the university and its host communities through education, masks, physical distancing, hand hygiene, self-reported diagnosis, active health screening, enhanced ventilation, and ongoing cleaning.
Julie Flaherty can be reached at julie.flaherty@tufts.edu.
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