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Sam Houston State, Texas State University System to hire contact tracers as experts warn of a fall COVID-19 surge

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Sam Houston State University and the Texas State University System are planning to hire 200 contact tracers as experts warn of a potential fall COVID-19 surge. Credit: Miguel Gutierrez Jr./The Texas Tribune

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Sam Houston State University and the Texas State University System are aiming to hire approximately 200 COVID-19 contact tracers statewide ahead of an expected resurgence of the novel coronavirus this fall.

As colleges and universities emerge as potential hot spots for the virus, SHSU hopes to recruit students and those in surrounding communities for the part-time, remote positions to track COVID-19 cases across Texas.

Chad Hargrave, associate vice president of SHSU’s Office of Research and Sponsored Programs, said the university system joined with state health officials to recruit a large workforce and leverage the system’s geographic reach.

Experts say contact tracing — the often arduous process of cataloging an infected patient’s every move to determine who else may have been exposed to the virus — is vital to mitigating spread and safely reopening businesses.

Gov. Greg Abbott in April set a goal of employing 4,000 contact tracers by June 1 as part of his phased reopening plan. But the state has consistently struggled to meet that mark. That month, the DSHS shrunk its contact tracing workforce even as cases of COVID-19 surged, hospitals in some parts of the state neared capacity and Abbott ordered bars to again close.

Local health departments described a frenzied effort to hire enough contact tracers to meet the need. But long lines and slow turnaround for COVID-19 tests — which sometimes took weeks to get results — meant an infected person could potentially expose more people before contact tracers could begin their work.

Abbott’s goal fell far short of estimates by outside groups that analyzed Texas' needs. In late April, the Association of State and Territorial Health Officials estimated that Texas would need almost 9,000 contact tracers. A George Washington University model puts that number at more than 30,000, based on the number of cases in the past 14 days.

Texas currently has more than 3,500 contact tracers, according to DSHS spokesperson Chris Van Deusen. The state partnered with the Texas State University System to “provide additional flexibility as the pandemic continues,” he said.

“As it stands, there are enough contact tracers in the call center to handle the current workload,” Van Deusen said.

Key metrics, including the share of positive COVID-19 tests and new hospitalizations, have for weeks trended downward from their summertime peak. The state reported a seven-day positivity rate — or the proportion of positive tests — of 5.94% as of Sunday, down from more than 20% at its highest.

Earlier this month, Abbott loosened restrictions for retail stores and restaurants, which can now operate at up to 75% capacity, and allowed hospitals to resume elective surgeries.

Continued testing and contact tracing efforts are necessary to monitor and contain the virus’ spread, experts say.

Health officials, meanwhile, are preparing for another potential surge this fall. Cases in some states have already begun to rise as students return to schools, governments relax restrictions and people take fewer precautions. They warn that an active flu season poses a further threat to a strained health care system.

“We could have a resurgence — a third peak — that’s potentially worse than the one we just went through,” Dr. Peter Hotez, dean at the National School of Tropical Medicine at Baylor College of Medicine, said during an interview at the 2020 Texas Tribune Festival.

Robert Redfield, director of the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, previously issued a bleak forecast for the fall and winter, warning that the coming months could be “one of the most difficult times that we experienced in American public health.”

Disclosure: Sam Houston State University and the Texas State University System have been financial supporters of The Texas Tribune, a nonprofit, nonpartisan news organization that is funded in part by donations from members, foundations and corporate sponsors. Financial supporters play no role in the Tribune's journalism. Find a complete list of them here.


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