Category Ranking

98%

Total Visits

921

Avg Visit Duration

2 minutes

Citations

20

Article Abstract

Background: University spring break carries a two-pronged SARS-CoV-2 variant transmission risk. Circulating variants from universities can spread to spring break destinations, and variants from spring break destinations can spread to universities and surrounding communities. Therefore, it is critical to implement SARS-CoV-2 variant surveillance and testing strategies to limit community spread before and after spring break to mitigate virus transmission and facilitate universities safely returning to in-person teaching.

Methods: We examined the SARS-CoV-2 positivity rate and changes in variant lineages before and after the university spring break for two consecutive years. 155 samples were sequenced across four time periods: pre- and post-spring break 2021 and pre- and post-spring break 2022; following whole genome sequencing, samples were assigned clades. The clades were then paired with positivity and testing data from over 50,000 samples.

Results: In 2021, the number of variants in the observed population increased from four to nine over spring break, with variants of concern being responsible for most of the cases; Alpha percent composition increased from 22.2% to 56.4%. In 2022, the number of clades in the population increased only from two to three, all of which were Omicron or a sub-lineage of Omicron. However, phylogenetic analysis showed the emergence of distantly related sub-lineages. 2022 saw a greater increase in positivity than 2021, which coincided with a milder mitigation strategy. Analysis of social media data provided insight into student travel destinations and how those travel events may have impacted spread.

Conclusions: We show the role that repetitive testing can play in transmission mitigation, reducing community spread, and maintaining in-person education. We identified that distantly related lineages were brought to the area after spring break travel regardless of the presence of a dominant variant of concern.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11081374PMC
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0301225PLOS

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

spring break
32
sars-cov-2 variant
12
break
10
spring
8
break travel
8
transmission mitigation
8
university spring
8
spread spring
8
break destinations
8
community spread
8

Similar Publications

The journey of Chinese craniofacial surgery is a testament to resilience, innovation, and interdisciplinary collaboration. Its origins trace back to the historic spring of 1977, when Professor Zhang Disheng performed China's first intracranial approach orbital hypertelorism correction at Shanghai Ninth People's Hospital. Operating with rudimentary manual instruments in the absence of electric saws or drills, the metallic clinks against bone symbolized not only medical ingenuity but also the courage to break ideological constraints.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Purpose: Seasonal body image refers to within-person variations in body image satisfaction that correspond with climatic seasonality (winter, spring, summer, and autumn). Previous cross-sectional research involving male participants from northern (UK, USA, and Canada) and southern hemisphere (Australia) nations reports a peak in body image dissatisfaction during the summertime, with a decrease in the wintertime. Big Data extracted from social media platforms provides a novel means of further exploring the seasonal body image hypothesis in a larger and more diverse sample across several years.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

In the spring maize cropping system, film-side sowing technology can improve crop yield stability and film recycling in the dry farming zone by optimizing the film cover pattern, resulting in a synergistic effect of moisture conservation, yield enhancement, and on-farm film residue management. However, the effect on the resistance to lodging is not clear. Consequently, a two-year agricultural trial was designed to evaluate how distinct ground-cover cultivation strategies influence root architecture, biomechanical performance, lodging incidence, grain production efficiency, and economic profitability.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The Lancet Countdown on health and plastics.

Lancet

September 2025

Heidelberg Institute of Global Health and Interdisciplinary Centre for Scientific Computing, Heidelberg University, Heidelberg, Germany; Department of Epidemiology and Global Health, Umeå University, Umeå, Sweden.

Plastics are a grave, growing, and under-recognised danger to human and planetary health. Plastics cause disease and death from infancy to old age and are responsible for health-related economic losses exceeding US$1·5 trillion annually. These impacts fall disproportionately upon low-income and at-risk populations.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The formation of a body axis is one of the fundamental steps in developmental patterning in multicellular organisms. Ectopic expression of the stomatal protein BASL (BREAKING OF ASYMMETRY IN THE STOMATAL LINEAGE) reveals a proximal-distal cell polarity field in the leaf and an apical-basal field in the hypocotyl and root of . This provides a framework for uncovering molecular components of body-axis cell polarity in higher plants.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF