Big Island Thieves

University of Hawaii Geo-tracking App Fails as UH Mānoa Responds to COVID-19 Cluster

Months after the University of Hawaii forced itʻs Statewide geo-tracking app on Staff, Faculty and Students. The University of Hawai’i at Mānoa is working to contain an apparent COVID-19 virus cluster spread from its campus to itʻs on-campus student housing.

The 10 students (7 positive and 3 close contacts) have been temporarily moved off campus to isolate and be monitored and cared for. Six of the seven who tested positive have no in-person classes this semester. The seventh has a hybrid course, but health officials determined that they were infected after the last time the class met in-person. All of the rooms involved have been closed and building common areas cleaned and disinfected, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and university COVID-19 guidelines. The campus community has been notified, and the occupants of the affected buildings have been reminded to remain vigilant.

Positive cases on the Mānoa campus are reported to and investigated by the campus COVID-19 Resource Team, a group of healthcare professionals. The team is responsible for the contact tracing process and identifying areas on campus that have to be closed due to possible exposure. The contact tracing process is more effective in a university environment because the information needed (building occupants and employees, class members and faculty, etc.) is readily available. The Hawaiʻi Department of Health (DOH) is also investigating.

UH Mānoa also recently began surveillance testing student residents and employees in residence halls during the past month, with about 50 randomly selected, asymptomatic students and employees tested each week, with no positive results thus far.  The COVID-19 Resource Team will be consulted regarding any appropriate modifications to surveillance testing protocols. 

When the pandemic started in 2020, the UH 10-campus system took a number of actions, including instituting mandatory requirements, that have successfully prevented spread of the virus:

Since April 2020, there have been 92 reported cases of COVID-19 on UH’s 10 campuses, 61 at UH Mānoa, the system’s largest campus. Among those, 25 have been students who live on the Mānoa campus with 14 reported cases in fall 2020 and 11 cases so far in spring 2021. There are about 1,400 students living on campus, about 50 percent below full capacity.

Exit mobile version