The County is working with San Diego State University to respond to a spike in COVID-19 cases in students who are enrolled in classes at the university. Since the beginning of the fall semester on Aug. 24, the university has reported 64 confirmed and probable cases in students who live on and off campus.
The County is collaborating with university officials to mitigate the situation.
“We do expect more cases so what’s important is how we respond,” said Eric McDonald, M.D., M.P.H., medical director of the County Epidemiology and Immunization Services branch. “I’m very pleased with the working relationship we have with SDSU. The information our disease investigators are gathering, in addition to what campus officials are providing, really allows us to paint a complete picture and I am particularly impressed with the cooperation of the students.”
McDonald said the 64 cases among the student population do not constitute a single large outbreak. Ten of the 64 reported cases live in the same location, an off-campus housing facility. Other cases may be linked epidemiologically, but these groups of cases are not directly related to each other, and some cases are known to be related to exposures outside the county.
Students who have tested positive for the virus are isolating away from their peers, either in on-campus housing units set aside for this purpose or in County public health rooms.
The County is currently assisting with testing on campus and will partner with the university to expand testing capacity in the coming days. The university houses one of the County’s busiest drive-up test sites and starting today, capacity at that site will expand to 350 tests a day.
The testing site is located at 6200 Alvarado Road and beginning Sept. 8, the site will become a walk-up site with no appointments required to get tested for COVID-19.
The rise in cases at SDSU is in line with a trend the County has been reporting on throughout the summer. The number of young people who test positive for COVID-19 has been steadily increasing, especially since businesses started to reopen in July.
Of the more than 39,000 COVID-19 cases reported in the region, San Diegans between 20 and 39 years of age represent more than 44% of all cases.
Since the state uses the county’s case rate and testing positivity numbers to determine which sectors of the economy can reopen and to what extent, it is important that San Diegans follow public health orders which are designed to minimize the spread of the virus.
“The actions we take now will have an impact on our numbers in the coming weeks,” said Wilma J. Wooten, M.D., M.P.H., County public health officer. “We don’t want to slip back into a more restrictive tier, so we urge the public to stay the course, avoid social gatherings and practice good hygiene.”
New State Metrics:
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More Information:
More detailed data summaries can be found on the County’s coronavirus-sd.com website.