1. Contacts and behaviours of university students during the COVID-19 pandemic at the start of the 2020/2021 academic year
- Author
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Clara Montgomery, Caroline L Relton, Adam Finn, Josephine G. Walker, Rachel Kwiatkowska, Leon Danon, Amy Thomas, Jane Metz, Gibran Hemani, Emily Nixon, Ellen Brooks-Pollock, Adam Trickey, Hannah Christensen, Katy Turner, and Sarah Sauchelli
- Subjects
Male ,0301 basic medicine ,infectious diseases ,0302 clinical medicine ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Pandemic ,Longitudinal Studies ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Social isolation ,Multidisciplinary ,Infectious disease transmission ,human behaviour ,4. Education ,Covid19 ,Middle Aged ,Test (assessment) ,Social Isolation ,Quarantine ,Medicine ,Regression Analysis ,Infectious diseases ,Female ,medicine.symptom ,Psychology ,Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Universities ,Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) ,Science ,education ,Context (language use) ,Article ,CONQUEST ,Young Adult ,03 medical and health sciences ,Human behaviour ,medicine ,Humans ,Students ,Aged ,Academic year ,COVID-19 ,United Kingdom ,030104 developmental biology ,Viral infection ,Family medicine ,viral infection - Abstract
University students have unique living, learning and social arrangements which may have implications for infectious disease transmission. To address this data gap, we created CONQUEST (COroNavirus QUESTionnaire), a longitudinal online survey of contacts, behaviour, and COVID-19 symptoms for University of Bristol (UoB) staff/students. Here, we analyse results from 740 students providing 1261 unique records from the start of the 2020/2021 academic year (14/09/2020–01/11/2020), where COVID-19 outbreaks led to the self-isolation of all students in some halls of residences. Although most students reported lower daily contacts than in pre-COVID-19 studies, there was heterogeneity, with some reporting many (median = 2, mean = 6.1, standard deviation = 15.0; 8% had ≥ 20 contacts). Around 40% of students’ contacts were with individuals external to the university, indicating potential for transmission to non-students/staff. Only 61% of those reporting cardinal symptoms in the past week self-isolated, although 99% with a positive COVID-19 test during the 2 weeks before survey completion had self-isolated within the last week. Some students who self-isolated had many contacts (mean = 4.3, standard deviation = 10.6). Our results provide context to the COVID-19 outbreaks seen in universities and are available for modelling future outbreaks and informing policy.
- Published
- 2021
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