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NEW HAVEN, CONNECTICUT · FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 2021 · VOL. CXLIII, NO. 14 · yaledailynews.com
Skirting state guidelines, Yale vaccinates all medical students BY ROSE HOROWITCH STAFF REPORTER The University is using vaccines allocated by the state of Connecticut to immunize all medical students, even those removed from patient contact, in Phase 1a of the state’s vaccine rollout plan. The decision — which counters the spirit of state guidelines — has raised questions about whether it is equitable to prioritize non-patient-facing members of the population in vaccine rollout at elite, well-resourced institutions. Maura Fitzgerald, spokesperson for the Connecticut Department of Public Health, said that the state only intended to include medical students in clinical rotations in Phase 1a. Yale, however, chose to offer vaccine appointments to all medical students. University officials justified their allocation on the grounds that that all medical students could come into contact with patients. Additionally, it is difficult to deter-
mine which students might see patients, they said. “I think there’s a very important balance between equity and efficiency here,” said Howard Forman, a professor at the School of Management and the School of Public Health. Vaccines should go to the most vulnerable and under-resourced communities first, but the perfect cannot be the enemy of the good, he said. Forman explained further that if there are extra vaccines left over — vaccines come in five- or ten-dose vials that must be used within hours — that might go to waste, they should go to someone even if they are not part of the primary group. Some students expressed surprise at the plan, saying that a large portion of them do not interact with patients. Others said that the “arbitrary” vaccination plan happened quickly enough for the order not to make a significant difference in COVID-19 immunity. Per Connecticut guidelines, the first round of vaccines was fast tracked to health care personnel,
which the state defined as people serving in health care settings with the potential for direct or indirect exposure to patients or infectious materials. Still, Yale Health, which gets a supply of vaccines specifically earmarked for members of the Yale community, has distributed vaccines to students who do not come into contact with patients, according to a Jan. 4 email sent to those students. “Please do not exclude yourself from this group even if you are not at this moment caring for patients,” the email reads. “If you exclude yourself from this group, you will lose all prioritization.” The University decided to allow medical, physician assistant and nursing students to sign up for vaccines in reverse alphabetical order, regardless of whether they came into contact with patients. All of them have been invited to receive the vaccine over the next eight or nine weeks, according to Chief Executive Officer of Yale Health Paul Genecin.
ERIC WANG/SENIOR PHOTOGRAPHER
Phase 1a of the state vaccine allocation plan includes people serving in health care settings with the potential for exposure to patients or infectious materials. That email contradicts what School of Medicine Dean Nancy Brown later told the News in a Jan. 24 email: that Yale Health is offering vaccinations to clinicians, medical students and physician assistants who inter-
act with patients; researchers who are studying COVID19; and clinical laboratory staff who work with samples that may contain live virus. SEE VACCINES PAGE 4
Orange alert level unchanged since Nov. MLAX: No play in spring, Ierlan to Denver BY ROSE HOROWITCH STAFF REPORTER
COURTESY OF RICK BARNES/YALE ATHLETICS
Yale men's lacrosse players shake hands with Pennsylvania State University players after a game. BY AKSHAR AGARWAL STAFF REPORTER As student-athletes’ fates remain in limbo regarding spring competition, the Yale men’s lacrosse team has officially decided that it will not play
this season due to an insufficient number of players enrolled, according to an email sent from head coach Andy Shay to some alumni of the program. Shay also confirmed in the email SEE M. LACROSSE PAGE 4
As students start the spring semester, local coronavirus infection rates are so high that they might have moved Yale to a red alert on its color-coded COVID-19 alert system, confining students to their dorms and eventually sending them home. Connecticut’s rolling 7-day average for new cases per day sits at 1,744 as of Sunday — which may have been enough to put the University in its most restrictive red level, according to Richard Martinello, medical director of infection prevention at Yale New Haven Hospital and public health committee member. When Yale first set the orange alert level on Nov. 6, the rolling average was 988, according to a New York Times database. Despite that growth, the alert level remains unchanged. The numbers are one factor that the committee considers when advising COVID-19 Coordinator Stephanie Spangler on the levels. Though infection rates have risen, Martinello said that it would not be a good idea to start the semester at
“crisis level,” as it would be challenging to scale up safety protocols should the situation worsen. “The numbers were only one piece of everything that was leading to those color designations that Dr. Spangler was communicating,” Martinello told the News. “It just really reflects how much COVID is here in Connecticut right now that we’re beyond where we had already set those numbers.”
The committee has not yet discussed whether to recalibrate the alert levels to account for increased transmission in the area, Martinello said. While the committee has met frequently over the past several months, its focus has been on the vaccine rollout and other aspects of the upcoming term, he explained. SEE ALERT PAGE 4
YALE NEWS
When asked why the University was not at the red alert level, Martinello said it would not be good to start the term at a crisis level.
YCC, GPSS and GSA Yale will not rename Schwarzman Center leaders all women BY JULIA BIALEK STAFF REPORTER Currently, the three main student governing bodies within the University — the Yale College Council, the Graduate and Professional Student Senate and the
Graduate Student Assembly — are all led by women. This is the first time that this has occurred since the 2007-2008 academic year. Aliesa Bahri ’22 currently serves as the YCC president, Patrice SEE WOMEN LEADERS PAGE 5
YALE NEWS
Stephen Schwarzman '69 has donated almost $4 million to former President Donald Trump’s campaign efforts. BY ROSE HOROWITCH STAFF REPORTER COURTESY OF PATRICE COLLINS, ALIESA BAHRI AND MEAGHAN MCGEARY
Patrice Collins, Aliesa Bahri and Meaghan McGeary currently head the three main student governing bodies within the University.
Stephen Schwarzman ’69, chief executive officer of Blackstone and loyal donor to former President Donald Trump and Yale,
CROSS CAMPUS
INSIDE THE NEWS
THIS DAY IN YALE HISTORY, 1954.
DOWE
Nine Yale students are fined $20 in City Court and convicted for breach of peace, after police officers testify that they had thrown snowballs in their direction.
Andrew Dowe, beloved lecturer, DUS and Office of LGBTQ Resources, leader died unexpectedly this weekend in his home. He was 34 years old. Page 3 UNIVERSITY
GRAMMYS
will soon formally have his name emblazoned on a building in the heart of Yale’s campus. But in the wake of the Jan. 6 Capitol riots — in which far-right extremists injured 140 police officers and five people died —
The list of 2021 Grammy Award nominees includes 28 Yale alumni, mostly of the School of Music and for classical music categories. Page 7 ARTS
NHPS
As seven schools in the district confirm COVID-19 cases, parents and city officials remain divided over the New Haven Public Schools reopening plan. Page 8 CITY
some professors have renewed calls on the University to remove Schwarzman’s name from the new student center, now set to open within the coming year. They argue the symbolic cost of Schwarzman’s naming rights may be too high — even when offset by the $150 million donation the businessman gave to the University. University President Peter Salovey disagrees. In an interview with the News, he said that Yale would not place a moratorium on donations from Schwarzman or rename the Schwarzman Center — actions the University has taken against others in the past. Schwarzman, Salovey argued, has broken from Trump in the wake of the insurrection. “I think it’s really important here to report the facts,” Salovey said in an interview with the News. He quoted from statements SEE SCHWARZMAN PAGE 5 VACCINE
Yale’s COVID19 vaccination outreach aims to address vaccine hesitancy and accessibility issues, especially for those disproportionately affected by the pandemic. Page 9 SCITECH