Wielding a blunt but effective tool: physical distancing
On Jan. 31, Fred Hutch’s Dr. Trevor Bedford published a short blog post that hinted a huge crisis was brewing. Bedford found genomic evidence that the novel coronavirus, as it was called then, could spread easily between people. Weeks later, he would announce that the virus had been creeping silently across Washington state.
The pandemic had arrived.
On March 2, Fred Hutch activated its Incident Command team. Leaders from across the organization — infectious disease experts, virologists, operations managers, to name a few — started to discuss how to respond. Three days later, Fred Hutch’s remote work policy kicked in. It was based on the effective — but blunt — tool of physical distancing.
And it’s still in use, even as Fred Hutch looks to bring more employees back to its labs.
“At this point, the main thing we can do is control our density on campus,” said Dr. Niki Robinson, Fred Hutch’s vice president and deputy chief operating officer. “Until physical distancing isn’t the only intervention we know of that works against COVID-19, we’re approaching these efforts with the goal of keeping the number of people on campus as low as possible while still being able to achieve our mission and our goal of near-zero transmission on campus.”
So far, it’s working, Robinson said. There have been no known transmissions between Hutch employees.
Another key tool to keep employees safe is mandatory symptom screening. All visitors to campus are funneled through one of five screening stations, where a screener asks whether they have symptoms of COVID-19 or have had a positive test within the past 30 days. If any answers are yes, they head home and get referred for testing.
Prominent signs in parking garages and building entrances announce the mandatory screening. Visitors and employees can’t miss them — and that’s by design, said Dr. Steve Pergam, an infectious disease expert at Fred Hutch and its clinical-care partner, Seattle Cancer Care Alliance.
Pergam wanted those signs front and center to hammer home the importance that if you’re symptomatic, you need to isolate and stay at home.
“Employees everywhere don’t want to let down their colleagues, so there can be a tendency to go to work even when you’re sick with a cold or the flu,” said Pergam, the Incident Command team’s medical adviser. “But as a research facility, we need to change that culture. In the era of COVID-19, coming to work sick is no longer OK.”
The data suggest the message is getting through. When symptom-screening stations launched on the Fred Hutch campus in mid-April, 2.2% of employees had symptoms and were sent for COVID-19 testing. By the first week of May, it was down to .2%.