10ofRods
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That doesn't sound like a bad idea. It would allow them to develop herd immunity while the vulnerable populations were protected. When herd immunity is reached, everyone would be safer, right?
There is no scientific evidence that herd immunity is even a thing, without vaccines, nor that herd immunity is possible in the case of CoVid (too soon, but also...concerning issues regarding lasting antibodies).
Only about 1 in 10,000 of those students would die, but about 3000 of them would need hospitalization. If UK thinks they can handle such a load (how many students total? enough hospital beds?) and they have nurses, doctors and PPE for all of that load?
Don't forget that not everyone lives in a dorm, so some students will be moving back and forth between parents' house and campus regularly, spreading it directly into the community. Everyone under 60 should probably avoid contact with either uni students or their parents (and if it were my workplace, I'd want full disclosure and tracing for all parents with kids/young adults in school).
Naturally, the professors and staff will get it too. A quick perusal of a couple of British universities shows, that in the US, the average age of a fully tenured professor is about 55. The profs who built the Oxford vaccine are about that age or a little older.
About 1% of the faculty over 55 and younger than 75 will die from CoVid, on average (2-3% of those 70-75). I know younger people think they can just step in and fill those jobs, but the best teaching profs are often the oldest ones (that's why there's emeritus status and some of the best profs at Oxford and Cambridge are in that category).
Anyway - there will be no herd immunity and it will roll through them. It will take about a year for all of them to get it - and the parents will be playing roulette, wondering if their kid just got it a week before holiday break. Once it's back out in the general community/adult workplaces, it will just be rinse and repeat - as there will always be a new crop of students that need to have it go through their ranks. Students with Type I diabetes (from birth) should probably stay home. All people dealing with cancer should stay home.
The student athletes may find that ground grass opacities (present in 40% of mild cases) ground their budding careers, as competing at top level with lung capacity reduced by even 1% point would take them out of the top ranks.
Here, we have a number of 20-somethings on lung transplant wait lists. Once the focus becomes "what's happening to our young people?" instead of "protect the old," I think each nation who attempts this is in for a world of confusion and hurt.