December 10, 2020

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VOLUME 139, ISSUE 9 | THURSDAY, DECEMBER 10, 2020

CAMPUS COVID-19 TESTING RAMPS UP AS CASES SOAR Students and faculty accessing the campus regularly need to be tested once a week at the ARC BY KATHLEEN QUINN campus@theaggie.org As COVID-19 cases at UC Davis rise significantly, the university now requires both students and faculty accessing the campus weekly to be tested every seven days before entering the campus. Jennifer Butler, the director of student affairs marketing and communications, said via email that they have been informing students about updates throughout the quarter. “Our plan was always to ramp up testing capacity and expand testing to our entire Aggie community, including all employees and students,” Butler said via email. The new requirements went into effect on Nov. 18, the week before the Thanksgiving holiday. There have been 45 positive asymptomatic COVID-19 tests on campus since Nov. 1, up from three in October, according to the UC Davis COVID-19 Dashboard. The increased availability and access to testing for the full Aggie community has more than doubled the amount of tests being processed. On Nov. 17, 1,404 asymptomatic tests were administered and one positive result was reported. On Nov. 18, the date testing access increased, 2,711 tests were administered and eight positive results were reported, the highest number in a single day since September. This suggests that the rising number of COVID-19 cases at UC Davis

may be connected to the rising number of tests, emphasizing the importance of testing the larger community to better see the actual prevalence of coronavirus in Davis. Test results are expected to be available in 2448 hours, but the new requirements do not make it necessary for the person accessing the campus to know the results of the test before entering campus, according to an email sent to students by Chancellor Gary May. Previously, the administration had been relying on a self-reported daily symptom survey for anyone visiting campus instead of a weekly test. The administration has moved the testing kiosk from the smaller pavilion location to the ARC to accommodate the increase in students and employees being tested. There are currently 88 active cases that are being reviewed by Student Health or Occupational Health, according to the safety services self-report website; the vast majority of the cases being investigated are employees of the university. Brian Trainor, a professor and the vice-chair of the psychology department, said he is still getting the hang of the new procedures. “It’s like going through airport security,” Trainor said. “You go to one station, they scan your phone, and then the other station and they give you some tubes, and then another station they give you the liquid, then the other station they actually have you take your mask off and spit in the tube.”

COVID-19 testing center located at the main gym at the ARC at UC Davis. (Quinn Spooner / Aggie) Billy Lewis, a third-year communication major who lives on campus, said he was in and out of the testing facility in five to seven minutes. “It was pretty fast,” Lewis said. “I’m really surprised at how available it is to us.” Butler said via email that the testing process for the test has been simplified. “During the initial pilot phase, the saliva screening process was backed up with a more traditional, certified testing process using nasal swabs,” Butler said via email. “After the saliva test was validated, we were able to expand capacity and additional groups of students and employees were invited to begin participating in the testing

program.” Though Trainor said students appear to be wearing masks consistently in the psychology department, he said the campus-wide usage of masks is a mixed bag. “Maybe 70% of people are wearing masks outside,” Trainor said. Lewis said he appreciated the increased availability of testing at the university as well as the convenience. “I think it’s necessary because most of the counties in California are in the purple zone,” Lewis said.

FREE SALIVA-BASED COVID-19 TESTING NOW AVAILABLE FOR DAVIS COMMUNITY Healthy Davis Together partnership between UC Davis and the City of Davis provides testing at the senior center BY RACHEL SHEY city@theaggie.org Healthy Davis Together, a partnership between UC Davis and the city of Davis, has brought free saliva-based COVID-19 testing to the broader Davis community. This test involves spitting, unlike the more invasive nasal swab test. The program also distributes free surgical masks. Currently, testing is available at the Davis Senior Center. On Dec. 6, a second testing center will open at the Mondavi Center for the Performing Arts. City of Davis Councilmember Dan Carson stressed the importance of collaboration between the City of Davis and UC Davis via email, and mentioned the newly introduced COVID-19 exposure app, called California COVID Notify. “One of the great things about the Healthy Davis Together program and efforts like the new Covid notification app are that they allow the City of Davis and the UC Davis campus to help each other to combat this dread[ful] disease and potentially save lives,” Carson said via email. Yolo County Supervisor Don Saylor explained via email that people who live in Davis, work in Davis or travel to Davis should take advantage of this testing opportunity. “Priority is being given to essential workers and people with significant public contact, including people who think they may have been exposed,” Saylor said via email. “But this saliva test is specifically for asymptomatic individuals; people experiencing COVID-19 symptoms are prohibited from using this test and should contact their healthcare providers for testing.” Chief Operating Officer of Healthy Davis Together Kenneth Burtis mentioned that frontline workers specifically are encouraged to

take advantage of the free testing. “Until we expand with the Mondavi Center, when our goal will be to test everyone in Davis, right now we really want to encourage a certain group of people to come in for testing,” Burtis said. “Those are people whose daily job or occupation requires them to be in contact with other people— frontline workers.” Saylor noted that Yolo County is considering ways to bring the saliva testing to other high-risk populations. “For example, we are considering ways to utilize saliva testing for staff and residents at skilled nursing facilities, convalescent hospitals and other congregate living facilities,” Saylor said via email. “For now, there are 500 tests available per

day through the Healthy Davis Together project, which is focused on preventing the spread of COVID-19 specifically in the Davis community.” City of Woodland Mayor Pro Tempore Tom Stallard expressed hope that the program could eventually be introduced to other nearby cities. “The university has done a phenomenal job of developing testing protocols for their own campus community and now the wider Davis community,” Stallard said. “Dr. Ken Burtis, a Woodland resident, has been overseeing it. It could be a model for communities everywhere. I’d love to have that testing protocol in our community.” Woodland has been harder-hit by COVID-19 than Davis, with 2,067 cases compared to 687 cases in Davis, as of Dec. 3. This is largely due to

KATHERINE FRANKS / AGGIE

demographic differences, according to Stallard. Burtis stated that the source of the Healthy Davis Together funding made it unlikely to be expanded to other cities. “Healthy Davis Together was actually funded by philanthropic donations from a number of parties with the specific goal of funding Davis and the city of Davis,” Burtis said. “We are also supporting people who live in other cities but work in Davis.” The collected samples are processed in the Genome Center at UC Davis, a process which Burtis described in detail. Once samples arrive at the Genome Center, a protein-cleaving enzyme is used to digest the polymers that create viscosity in saliva. The samples are placed in a machine called the IntelliQube, which conducts a type of polymerase chain reaction called quantitative PCR. “One of the ways we’re able to do so many samples is because robots do a lot of the work,” Burtis said. “The IntelliQube allows us to do many reactions at a time using a tape array. A fluorescent signal develops if it’s a positive—if the primers have amplified some viral RNA. If there’s no virus in the sample, the viral primers don’t cause any amplification.” Saylor expressed enthusiasm about the team effort. “The continued partnership between UC Davis, the City of Davis and Yolo County has been a great demonstration of the ‘Yolo Way’ and has been instrumental in allowing this program to get off the ground and operate as a key part of the COVID-19 mitigation measures in our region,” Saylor said via email.

PROJECT ROOMKEY HAS PROVIDED MORE THAN 49,000 NIGHTS OF SHELTER TO 500+ YOLO COUNTY HOMELESS INDIVIDUALS More than 61 permanent transitions to housing have been achieved through the program CATHY TANG / AGGIE

BY SHRADDHA JHINGAN city@theaggie.org Project Roomkey, a partnership between Human Services Agency and Yolo County Health on the local level, has provided 49,244 nights of shelter to around 533 members of the homeless population between March 16 and Nov. 17, averaging to 92 nights per individual, according to a press release published by Yolo County on Nov. 20. “While Project Roomkey was never intended to be a permanent housing solution, the program’s increased stability and access to case management services has resulted in over 61 permanent housing transitions to date [...],” the press release reads. Deputy Director of Police Services Deanne Machado said via email that Project Roomkey has helped the local community “[…] by temporarily providing shelter to the community’s most vulnerable, unhoused population.” “In the absence of Project Roomkey,

these individuals (many of whom are immunocompromised) would have likely continued to live unsheltered on our streets or in a congregate setting of some kind, both of which are particularly hazardous during a pandemic for this population,” Machado said via email. Homeless Program Coordinator at Yolo County Health and Human Services Nadia Waggener further explained how Project Roomkey has helped the community. “When we house our most vulnerable neighbors, the impact can be felt in our streets, in our hospitals, and in our bottom line,” Waggener said via email. “Project Roomkey (PRK) allows our community to live our Yolo values: serving our elderly and disabled neighbors while creating a safer community. PRK has moved people off the streets and into dignified living conditions where our seniors and disabled clients can receive medical care, case management and rest.” ROOMKEY on 11


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