they said that the university would require more than 6,000 tests per day in order to adequately monitor the virus. They said that professors calling for the university to ramp up testing have been ignored, and that saliva-testing has allowed places like the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign to test thousands of people per day. The latter school, according toThe professors also called on the college to release daily test results.
The professors said the school should have stepped up with contact tracing, not just leaving it to the overwhelmed contact tracers with the department."This results in a significant time lag, basically rendering contact tracing of little to no effect," the column said., which pivoted to online learning after a post-reopening spike in cases, the authors said that UGA's handling has shown that an uptick in cases could come as a surprise.
Greg Trevor, UGA's senior executive director for marketing and communications, said in a statement that the plan had been vetted and recommended by professionals. The full statement is below: The nasopharyngeal swab testing being conducted for free by UGA on campus is one of the most reliable forms of testing available. UGA is able to analyze specimens and provide accurate results within 24 - 72 hours. The purpose of our testing is surveillance. With 300 – 360 tests per day, we can monitor the direction of prevalence. If we see increases, we can determine hotspots and identify areas for intervention.
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