Abstract
Abstract
Universities provide many opportunities for the spread of infectious
respiratory illnesses. Students are brought together into close proximity from
all across the world and interact with one another in their accommodation,
through lectures and small group teaching and in social settings. The COVID-19
global pandemic has highlighted the need for sufficient data to help determine
which of these factors are important for infectious disease transmission in
universities and hence control university morbidity as well as community
spillover. We describe the data from a previously unpublished self-reported
university survey of coughs, colds and flu-like symptoms collected in Cambridge,
UK, during winter 2007-2008. The online survey collected information on symptoms
and socio-demographic, academic and lifestyle factors. There were 1076
responses, 97% from University of Cambridge students (5.7% of the total
university student population), 3% from staff and <1% from other
participants, reporting onset of symptoms between September 2007 and March 2008.
Undergraduates are seen to report symptoms earlier in the term than
postgraduates; differences in reported date of symptoms are also seen between
subjects and accommodation types, although these descriptive results could be
confounded by survey biases. Despite the historic and exploratory nature of the
study, this is one of few recent detailed datasets of flu-like infection in a
university context and is especially valuable to share now to improve
understanding of potential transmission dynamics in universities during the
current COVID-19 pandemic.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
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