HONOLULU — More than 92% of University of Hawai‘i students, and 95% of UH employees of the 10-campus system have been vaccinated for the COVID-19 virus or plan to be, according to surveys administered in late June.
The surveys administered by the UH Vaccination Team found that about 7% of students and 4% of employees still have no plans to receive a COVID-19 vaccine, with some expressing concern over the lack of full U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) approval of any COVID-19 vaccine.
The surveys asked participants for their vaccination status and if they were not planning to be vaccinated, why. The student survey was administered to a stratified, randomized sample based on the student body size of each campus. Of the 1,212 students surveyed, 31.1% responded.
The employee survey was sent to all 12,280 UH personnel and had a 49% response rate. The university is planning a follow-up survey of all students in mid-August and will provide assistance in getting vaccinated for anyone interested.
When UH announced that all students would be required to be vaccinated to participate on campus it was with the condition that at least one vaccine was fully approved by the FDA. That has not yet occurred.
Heartened by the high rate of vaccination among students and employees, UH is confident that under new guidelines being finalized its campuses will be safe even without fully enforcing the mandate when the fall semester begins.
The inclusion of COVID-19 vaccination in UH health clearance requirements for students will remain in place with enforcement limited to student housing residents and other specific activities, events and facilities to be determined. Enforcement of the vaccination requirement to attend in-person classes will take place only after a vaccine is fully approved by the FDA, so will begin no sooner than the spring 2022 semester.
“The single most important thing our students and employees can do to protect the health and wellbeing of themselves, their families and our campus communities is to be fully vaccinated for the upcoming fall semester,” UH President David Lassner said in a press release. “159 million Americans have safely received the vaccine and we are now seeing a growing number of preventable COVID-19 cases, hospitalizations and deaths among the unvaccinated. We are leaving the requirement in place, even if not fully enforced, to make the message clear.”
The COVID-19 vaccine requirement will be enforced this fall for students who live in on-campus housing at UH Manoa and UH Hilo because of the close communal contact.
Health and religious exemptions will be available for student residents. Other limitations may apply to the unvaccinated, but they will not be prevented from enrolling in on-campus classes. New safety guidelines will be released outlining practices to protect all students and employees.
Face coverings will be required while indoors on campus and all students, employees and visitors will still be required to utilize the LumiSight UH health check app, which now includes the ability to easily demonstrate vaccination status.
It is reassuring that those already reporting to UH campuses have been diligently following the COVID-19 safety guidelines.
The high vaccination rate within the UH community along with relatively low infection rates in Hawai‘i are positive signs heading into the fall semester. All 10 UH campuses will see dramatic increases in in-person instruction and on-campus activities this fall, with even more on-campus activity planned for the spring semester.
This is getting ridiculous, what happened to my body my choice? An individuals health choices should be nobody’s business but the individual
Your comment fails to address the fundamental question here – it is NOT my body, my choice which has a focus that is exclusively within the space of your body and not impacting those around you, it IS: are you going to endanger the community by being a carrier of a highly communicable disease. That viewpoint is my body – lets endanger the community because I am unwilling to take minimal steps to quash the virus.
You can make your own choices, but when they can cause problems for the rest of us, society regulates what the consequences are. Still, it’s your choice!
You see this happening all over the U.S. The schools and colleges are opening. Sports is opening. In Florida the latest on deaths are a whopping 39,000 deaths from COVID-19. This is a lot. Compared to Hawai’i schools, this will definitely be an influence in favor of Ron Desantis. Hawai’i will follow.
Your comment fails to address the fundamental question here – it is NOT my body, my choice which has a focus that is exclusively within the space of your body and not impacting those around you, it IS: are you going to endanger the community by being a carrier of a highly communicable disease. That viewpoint is my body – lets endanger the community because I am unwilling to take minimal steps to quash the virus.
Well they will not because they cannot legally force someone to take an emergency use authorized medical procedure. It is not approved.