Dr. Hanage cautioned that few campuses will make it through the semester with in-person classes without rigorous screening. “We were caught off guard when cases started going from a few a day to 30 a day,” Mr. Spina said. “We are in a much better place than we were,” he said, noting that the university hopes to start in-person classes next week. Lior Pachter, a computational biologist at the university, said many schools had pushed responsibility for health and safety down to the individual student or faculty level. The school plans to offer in-person classes starting Sept 21.
Source: New York Times September 11, 2020 18:46 UTC