日韩AV

Key COVID-19 Updates & Significant Changes

   COVID-19 Updates | Posted on January 14, 2022

Letter to Students, Jan. 14, 2022: Key COVID-19 Updates & Significant Changes

Dear students,

We are just finishing our first week of this new semester and are settling into our regular routines. I want to thank each one of you for making the choice to attend Andrews this semester.

I realize that at this moment in time, each of us is being directly affected by the continued impact of COVID-19 on how we study, live, worship and share time together. So I want to also thank you for your patience and cooperation with us as we continue to create the best possible learning and working environment we can in this current context. 

Earlier this week, you received an about the current changes to isolation and quarantine expectations and times.

As a reminder, our current protocols require that all employees and students who are not fully vaccinated at a minimum, or who do not have natural immunity from a previous infection, should test once a month. To monitor compliance with this expectation, the University will randomly select employees and students each month to help assure that this is happening.

We continue to expect every member of our community to abide by our Community Covenant of Care, irrespective of changes to external COVID-19 regulations and protocols.

With that in mind, and as we move into a few very critical weeks in this global pandemic impacted by the Omicron variant, here are some recommendations and reminders—including some new ones—to maximize our capacity to serve each other well:

  1. Please remember that you should always report positive test results and symptoms using #CampusClear. With the Omicron variant still strongly impacting our nation, state and campus, we encourage each one of our students to make the choice to test frequently, where self-test kits are available.
  2. In addition to continuing to wear masks consistently indoors, regardless of vaccination status, please ensure they are at least two-ply in thickness (the fabric COVID-19 masks provided by 日韩AV are two-ply and meet this expectation).
  3. If you have not done so already, consider transitioning any in-person group gatherings to virtual/online connections for the next few weeks.
  4. Consider eliminating food (sadly) from gatherings for a few weeks to minimize the times face masks will be removed.
  5. Continue to watch the physical distancing and help establish and ensure natural distancing in spaces across our campus wherever that is possible.
  6. Keep up-to-date on vaccinations and record them .
  7. And the perfect seven—remember to do all you can to maintain a strong immune system through the eight natural remedies, which focus on nutrition, exercise, water, sunlight (be sure to check out the infrared options at the Andreasen Center for Wellness if it’s cloudy out), temperance, air, rest and trust. These healthy measures make a difference.

Finally, let us remember we need each other’s kindness, patience and care. We especially need each other at this time—throughout our entire 日韩AV community. If you didn’t get a chance to watch a special COVID-19 edition of yesterday at University Forum, be sure to check it out.

Thank you for being a cherished part of 日韩AV in these challenging times as together we welcome a new semester of learning and engagement here on our Berrien Springs campus.

With care,

Frances Faehner
Vice President for Campus & Student Life

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Letter to Employees, Jan. 13, 2022: Key COVID-19 Updates & Significant Changes

Dear colleagues,

We are just finishing our first week of this new semester, and we are again settling into our regular routines. We want to directly thank the many of you who attended our Town Hall meeting just over a week ago on Jan. 7 where we together looked at our COVID-19 protocols and plans for the semester, especially as our world and our campus face the new challenges brought by the Omicron variant.

We are now experiencing the immediate influx of cases that we anticipated and talked about in that Town Hall. We know that each one of us is being directly impacted by that. So we want to also thank you for your patience and cooperation with us as we, together, continue to create the best possible learning and working environment we can in this current context.

However, since we met, there are additional changes that are impacting us.

This afternoon, we received some significant updates on the impact of COVID-19 on healthcare in our community from Spectrum Health Lakeland:

Spectrum Health Lakeland continues to hit record numbers in the ongoing COVID-19 surge. We are encountering more hospitalized patients, more ICU patients, more ventilator usage than ever in our history, and our emergency department wait times have never been longer.

"86% of admissions are friends and neighbors that have not been vaccinated. Right now, 100% of our ICU admissions at Lakeland are for individuals that are not vaccinated," said Loren B. Hamel, MD, president, Spectrum Health Lakeland. "It absolutely decreases your risk of hospitalization and dramatically decreases your risk for ICU admission, for ventilation, and for death if you've been vaccinated."

You can watch the entire video report regarding Spectrum Health Lakeland’s current and challenging COVID-19 circumstances, including these comments from Dr. Hamel, .

Earlier this week, you received our most recent about the current changes to isolation and quarantine expectations and times.

Earlier this afternoon, we received confirmation that the Supreme Court has blocked the OSHA-ETS (Occupational Safety and Health Administration Emergency Temporary Standard) requiring vaccination or testing for employers with more than 100 employees, which would have included 日韩AV. As a result, for our campus community, that means our expectations on vaccination or testing will stay as they were in the first semester of this school year (you can continue to review these and other University protocols on our dedicated COVID-19 website).

As a reminder, our current protocols require that all those employees and students who are not fully vaccinated at a minimum, or who do not have natural immunity from a previous infection, should test once a month. To monitor compliance with this expectation, the University will randomly select employees and students each month to help assure that this is happening.

However, most importantly, we continue in our shared commitment to keep our community as safe as possible in line with our Community Covenant of Care, irrespective of changes to external COVID-19 regulations and protocols.

With that in mind, and as we move into a few very critical weeks in this global pandemic impacted by the Omicron variant, here are some recommendations and reminders—including some new ones—to maximize our capacity to serve each other well:

  1. With the Omicron variant still strongly impacting our nation, state and campus, we recommend that irrespective of our existing monthly testing expectations for those not vaccinated, we’d like to also invite all employees, regardless of vaccination status, to make a personal commitment to test weekly, where self-test kits are available. That new commitment represents only ten minutes of your time each week.

Also, please note that you can now charge eight home tests per person per month that you purchase personally to your 日韩AV medical insurance (additional details will be shared with employees by the Office of Human Resources), as well as other . Please remember that you should always report positive test results and symptoms using #CampusClear.

  1. In addition to continuing to wear masks consistently indoors, regardless of vaccination status, please ensure they are at least two-ply in thickness (the fabric COVID-19 masks provided by 日韩AV are two-ply and meet this expectation).
  1. If you have not done so already, consider moving any in-person meetings and committees you have planned to remote meetings for the next few weeks.
  1. Consider eliminating food (sadly) from gatherings for a few weeks to minimize the times face masks will be removed.
  1. Continue to watch the physical distancing and help establish and ensure natural distancing in spaces across our campus wherever that is possible.
  1. Keep up-to-date on vaccinations and record them .
  1. And the perfect seven—remember to do all you can to maintain a strong immune system through the eight natural remedies, which focus on nutrition, exercise, water, sunlight (be sure to check out the infrared options at the Andreasen Center for Wellness if it’s cloudy out), temperance, air, rest and trust. Those things make a difference.

Finally, let us remember we need each other’s kindness and care. We especially need each other at this time—our students need us and the wider community needs us. By the way, if you haven’t seen it yet, we invite you to watch a special COVID-19 edition of , which our Campus & Student Life team shared at University Forum earlier today.

Thank you for representing 日韩AV so well in these challenging times and as we welcome a new semester of study here on our Berrien Springs campus.

Andrea Luxton
President

Christon Arthur
Provost



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