This is Bwog’s weekly Roundup of how COVID is progressing in the Columbia community.
This week, there were 3360 tests conducted with 9 tests coming back positive for a 0.27% positivity rate. The positivity rate is down from last week’s positivity rate of 0.68%. 557 faculty and staff members were tested with 1 test coming back positive. 2033 students at the Morningside, Manhattanville, and Lamont-Doherty campuses were tested, with 5 tests coming back for a 0.25% positivity rate.
This puts Columbia at the current alert level of “low risk (yellow)” which means non-academic gatherings have capacity limits and “other gatherings” are restricted. Columbia has lifted visitor/ guest restrictions in dorms and has allowed students to sign in one guest who both has a Green Pass and is a CUID holder. Indoor capacity limits will be lifted starting November 1st.
Columbia has not released data on how many students are in isolation and quarantine.
*Notes on the graph: Bwog calculated these positivity rates using the posted amount of positive and total tests in all students for a given week. Columbia does not differentiate graduate and undergraduate students in its count, so graduate students will be counted in the positivity rates from week to week. Numbers may change from week to week as Columbia continues to update their data.
This week, there were 2038 tests conducted with 3 tests coming back positive for a 0.15% positivity rate. Residential students had a positivity rate of 0.16%, non-residential students had a positivity rate of 0.00%, and staff had a positivity rate of 0.36%. 6 people are in isolation, and 3 are in quarantine.
Since August 8th, 2020, Barnard has conducted 116,499 tests with 240 being positive for a 0.21% positivity rate.
*Notes on the graph: Bwog calculated these positivity rates using the posted amount of positive and total tests in all students, residential and non-residential for a given week. For all students in the week of September 20th, 6 tests came back positive out of 2,740 tests. Barnard does not report a positivity rate for all students so Bwog did an internal calculation. Numbers may change from week to week as Barnard continues to update their data. Check the week of Sep 13-19’s roundup for more details on how Barnard calculates their positivity rate
NYC residents 18 and older are all eligible for booster shots as New York health officials consider living in the city a “high risk” situation.
In New York City, there are 1069 confirmed cases of COVID-19. 7,197,831 residents received one dose and 6,396,747 have completed their vaccine series. If you need help finding a vaccine appointment, try this link, this link, or your local pharmacy.
Currently, all residents 12 and older are eligible to receive the vaccine in New York. The Food and Drug Administration met on Tuesday, October 26th, to discuss expanding eligibility to children aged 5 to 11. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has now officially recommended the Pfizer-BioNTech vaccine for children between the ages of 5 to 11. Pfizer has asked the CDC to authorize the use of Covid booster shots for all adults, with the request likely to be granted before the holiday season. If the request is granted, the 181 million already fully vaccinated adults in the US will be able to get booster shots.
New York City is continuing to open up but with vaccine caveats. All NYC city workers, excluding uniformed correction officers, are required to have at least one dose of the COVID-19 vaccine by 5pm on October 29th. There are currently around 46,000 unvaccinated city employees. Those who refuse the vaccine will be placed on unpaid leave until this requirement can be met. All NYPD, FDNY, and DSNY employees will be required to have at least one dose of the vaccine by November 1st. Civilian Department of Correction officers will be subject to this mandate by December 1st. 92% of City workers are vaccinated and those who wished to be exempt from the mandate had until November 2nd to file for an exemption to avoid being placed on leave without pay during an appeals process. While around 2300 city workers received their first dose to avoid being noncompliant with the mandate, around 9000 City employees have opted to be placed on unpaid leave for failure to comply with the mandate
As of August 17th, through the Key to NYC campaign, all vaccine-eligible residents must show proof of at least one dose of an FDA emergency-use authorized COVID-19 vaccine to be able to enjoy indoor dining, indoor fitness, and entertainment spaces. To show proof of vaccination, New Yorkers can show a photo of their CDC vaccination card, the physical CDC vaccination card, NYC COVID Safe App, Excelsior Pass/ Excelsior Pass Plus, or have a photocopy of a different immunization record that includes your healthcare provider.
Graphs via Flourish
Header Art by Ava Morouse