Education leaders confused about reopening schools

Looking for guidance on how and when to bring back students to campuses where social distancing is a challenge, university officials held a session with the White House on Wednesday, said Michael Lovell, president of Marquette University in Milwaukee.

University leaders on the call wanted to see a “very clear” set of guidelines outlining what it means to safely reopen campuses, Lovell said. They stressed the need for guidance from the federal government and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to ensure students’ safety.

“It’s very, very important for us as campuses to have the resources we need to be able to open the campus and stay safe. And so that includes new protocols around social distancing but also testing and tracking students and others within the campus to ensure that people are safe,” Lovell said.

The Vice President’s office provided a readout of the call linking to the CDC guidance from March, which does not discuss how to reopen campuses in the fall. The CDC told CNN it’s considering updating the guidance to focus on reopening.

A man walks on the Columbia University campus on March 9. Colleges nationwide shut down campuses and continue with classes online as the coronavirus pandemic grew.

A man walks on the Columbia University campus on March 9. Colleges nationwide shut down campuses and continue with classes online as the coronavirus pandemic grew.

A man walks on the Columbia University campus on March 9. Colleges nationwide shut down campuses and continue with classes online as the coronavirus pandemic grew.

Marquette plans to allow students back on campus in the fall. If there are more coronavirus infections, the university will be ready to adapt, including keeping options open on both in-person and online classes, Lovell said.

Dr. Anthony Fauci, a key member of the White House’s coronavirus task force, has said schools should not expect a coronavirus vaccine or widely available treatment by fall.

In California, most students in the state’s two main university systems will likely not return this fall. The California State University system plans to cancel nearly all in-person classes through the fall semester, Chancellor Timothy White said.

The University of California, which has 10 campuses statewide, is considering a mixed approach where some students go to classrooms and labs while others remain remote.

Wisconsin’s highest court rules against the governor

The decision on whether to reopen remains divisive. In Wisconsin, the state Supreme Court overturned the stay-at-home order issued by the governor, calling it “unlawful” and “unenforceable.”

In a win for the state’s Republican-led legislature, the court ruled that Democratic Gov. Tony Evers’ administration overstepped its authority when it extended the order to May 26. Lawmakers argued the order would cost residents their jobs and hurt many companies.

The ruling leaves the state in chaos, the governor said. “Now we have no plan and no protections for the people of Wisconsin,” he added.

Experts and lawmakers argue over leadership

Months into the pandemic, testing remains a crucial point of contention between experts and officials

A panel of top health experts Wednesday sparred with lawmakers on the House Select Committee on the Coronavirus Crisis over testing, tracing and targeted containment of the virus.

“Testing was the fundamental failure that forced our country to shut down,” testified Dr. Ashish Jha, the director of the Harvard Global Health Institute. “Testing tells us who has the disease and who doesn’t. And testing is the cornerstone of controlling every single disease outbreak. It was inadequate testing that precipitated the national shutdown.”

Jha slammed the government response, warning that the nation’s testing capabilities are not there yet.

“I believe we need federal leadership,” he said. “The institute that I run has calculated that the US needs more than 900,000 tests every day to safely open up again. We’re doing about a third of that.”

Republican lawmakers pushed back.

“I’m sorry, but we shut the economy down to flatten the curve, to not max out our ICU bed capacity and our ventilator capacity, period. It wasn’t an absence of testing that caused us to shut down the economy. We shut down the economy to save lives, American lives, because of the ICU and ventilator issue,” said Rep. Mark Green, a Republican from Tennessee.

Other health experts on the panel, including former FDA commissioner Dr. Scott Gottlieb, agreed that testing is one of the keys to safely reopening society.

Cases of mysterious illness in kids extend to 17 states

As the death toll grows nationwide, officials are grappling with the effects of the virus on children. Hospitals and clinics in at least 17 states have reported cases of a mystifying condition that seems to be affecting children after coronavirus infections. Cases in at least 150 children are under investigation, most of them in New York.
Expect more cases of strange coronavirus syndrome in kids, doctors warn

Expect more cases of strange coronavirus syndrome in kids, doctors warn

The condition appears to be a post-viral syndrome in children, said Dr. Jeffrey Burns, a critical care specialist at Boston Children’s Hospital. “This multisystem inflammatory syndrome is not directly caused by the virus,” he added. “The leading hypothesis is that it is due to the immune response of the patient.”

Symptoms include persistent fever, inflammation and poor function in organs such as the kidneys or heart. Children may also show evidence of blood vessel inflammation, such as red eyes, a bright red tongue and cracked lips, said Dr. Moshe Arditi, a pediatric infectious diseases expert at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles.

Not all of the affected children have tested positive for the coronavirus.

Study provides new details on air droplets

Researchers are still learning new things about the virus. A new study reveals regular talking releases small respiratory droplets that linger in the air for at least eight minutes, potentially explaining why coronavirus spreads faster in confined spaces.

The study published Wednesday used laser light to examine the small fluid droplets emitted through human speech.

“These observations confirm that there is a substantial probability that normal speaking causes airborne virus transmission in confined environments,” the study says.

It’s from researchers at the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases, along with the University of Pennsylvania.

The researchers concluded that such particles could be inhaled by others and lead to new coronavirus infections.

CNN’s Shelby Lin Erdman, Maggie Fox, Matthew Hoye and John Bonifield contributed to this report.

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