Saturday 28th June 2025
Blog Page 414

Overview: Oxford’s COVID-19 vaccine progress

Clinical trials for the COVID-19 vaccine were resumed following the death of a participant; the vaccine’s genetic programming was validated by the University of Bristol; and the Director of the Jenner Institute, Adrian Hill, expressed hope that some vulnerable groups could receive the vaccine by Christmas.

Global trials were “voluntarily paused” on 6th September after a volunteer developed transverse myelitis, a condition which causes inflammation of the spinal cord. While trials resumed in Brazil, South Africa, Japan and the United Kingdom resumed throughout September, the Food and Drug Administration in the United States refused to allow the trial to continue until they were convinced the volunteer’s illness was not caused by the vaccine.

30,000 volunteers are participating in trials for the Oxford vaccine in the United States, with a further 20,000 volunteers globally. It is hoped that the trial’s large sample size will mean that a vaccine can be developed more quickly, and that herd immunity can be induced safely within the global population.

The chief investigator of the trial at Oxford University, Professor Andrew Pollard, said: “We are very pleased the FDA has reached the same conclusion as the other regulators of the clinical trial sites around the world, declaring the trial safe to proceed in the USA…We will continue to adhere to our rigorous safety processes while moving as quickly as possible so we can start protecting people around the world against this terrible virus as soon as possible.”

The death of a trial volunteer in Brazil was also investigated. However, the volunteer had not received the vaccine, only the placebo, so it was not deemed to be connected to the trial.

This news comes in the same week that a team at Bristol University have independently confirmed that the Oxford vaccine genetic programming works as its developers intended. The validation goes “significantly above and beyond any regulatory requirements anywhere in the world”.

The Oxford vaccine works by co-opting the ability of viruses to introduce their genetic material into a cell, causing it to assemble more viruses. A harmless chimpanzee adenovirus is used to introduce a sequence of DNA from a SARS-CoV-2 virus which only produces the parts of a virus recognised by the body’s immune system. Scientists hope that this reduces the risk of a person becoming ill after receiving the vaccine. The research from Bristol University confirms that this process works, and that the required viral proteins are produced.

Professor Adrian Hill, who is leading the development process, has expressed hope that some high risk groups, such as the elderly, could receive doses of the vaccine by the end of the year. In a statement to members and alumni of Magdalen college he stressed that “the initial licence would be for emergency use, not full approval”.

Such approval would be dependent on safety data, including that collected from trials in the United States. The pause in the trials in the US has shown that the process of developing new vaccines is rarely straightforward, and so it is difficult to predict exactly when one may be approved for the general population.

Image credit: Amir Pichhadze

Summer Nostalgia

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At a time when the future is so uncertain we find ourselves reflecting on the past. This photoshoot has been inspired by such feelings of reflection, childhood and simply nostalgia for what this summer could have and should have been.

Tales from the Household: Lockdown

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Monday, 6:32 p.m. The email arrives saying someone in the house has tested positive and you’re going into isolation for 14 days. We lead such active lives at university that the split-second change of an imposed lockdown can feel like whiplash after a car slams on the brakes. Something analogous to the five-stages of grief ensues (denial – but it can’t really be 14 – anger, bargaining, depression, and acceptance – it is what it is) as the condolence texts flood your phone. Looking out on a 14-day line of dominoes, it can seem like the goal of each day is just to knock one down, but during my time in isolation I’ve found that the people in my household and our community as a whole has shown support for each other in spectacular ways.

Given Oxford’s recent rise in coronavirus cases, it’s more vital than ever that we uphold our social responsibility by isolating so that we protect the vulnerable members of our city. With that in mind, here are some suggestions to help you make the most of lockdown:

  1. House Events: Let’s be honest, you weren’t going to Park End anyway, so having some planned gatherings might be a step up for your social calendar. So far, my household has had drinks nights (which, if you’re not a drinker, could work to your advantage when it comes to the board game portion of the evening), dinners together, and movie nights (the Rudy Giuliani/Borat shock may well have brought us closer as a household).
  2. Indoor Workouts: One of the hardest things about isolation is, of course, not being able to go outside. Workouts in your room can help you take back control of your fitness. Pamela Reif, MadFit, and other training YouTube channels offer free high intensity workouts that let you sweat out some of the confinement. Also, if your friends or college will deliver items to your house, dumbbells can arrive quickly and provide a nice mind-muscle connection for tapping into your strength.
  3. Food: I am not embarrassed to admit that I depended upon the kindness of others and take-out meals before lockdown. While it may be overstatement to say that, by necessity, I’ve come into my own as a chef, I am now a cooking-convert. Time in the kitchen has become one of the most cherished parts of the day as my household and I catch up while sharing recipes, eating, and washing pots. We’ve found there’s something shockingly cathartic in taking raw ingredients and turning them into a nice meal for yourself. The obvious problem is of course that it’s hard to get the items you need for the full two weeks. I’ve personally found that anyone in our community is happy to help out people in isolation by going on food runs, but if you’d rather do the shopping yourself, Sainsburys and Tesco have delivery services and, for locally-sourced produce or specialty items, Farmdrop is an excellent – albeit slightly pricier – option. (For all of these, you have to plan a couple days in advance.) Of course, there’s a place for pizza delivery nights, too.
  4. Work: This can tend more toward personal preference. Though I’m not a list-maker, I’ve found that writing down in the morning the different work items I want to accomplish in the day can be helpful. Not only does it give the hours some structure but, at the end of the day – even though I almost certainly have not finished the essay or gotten to the Beckett lecture – it’s still satisfying to see my progress.
  5. Distractions: A word on procrastination’s evil twin. At Oxford, we’re always focusing on the next thing. Some of the best moments during lockdown have been when my housemates and I have made impromptu visits to each other’s rooms. Whether isolating with friends or people you hardly know, lockdown presents an opportunity to get to know your household in new ways. Drop-ins not only change up the tempo of the day but allow you some healthy distraction. 

When I came back to Oxford in October, I felt incredibly fortunate to be able to return to university when so many of my friends in the United States could not. I still do. Despite the difficulty lockdown presents, I cherish the ability to see my friends in safe settings and work in Oxford’s inspiring environment. I appreciate the tireless work of college administrators and staff who ensure our community stays safe and healthy.  

This term will inevitably present challenges. We are quite literally doing Oxford as no one has ever done it before. (How often can you say that at a 900-year-old institution?) At any moment you can get “the email.” But amidst the lack of certainty, creative emerges. Now, I like knowing the only box I have to check in the near-term is the one to vote in US elections from abroad. Lockdown doesn’t mean a two-week freeze on the clock when at any moment your household can have a new distraction.

Oxford’s Clarendon Centre to be redesigned in multi-million pound project

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The Oxford Clarendon Centre is expected to be redesigned following a proposal made by the London-based consultancy firm, Lothbury Investment Management.

The main aims of redesigning the building would be to create more dynamic public spaces in the heart of the city, and to open a new link to the nearby Frewin Court building which has been largely unused over recent years. The new design proposals would also include a ground and roof level.

The shopping centre owners have claimed that the coronavirus pandemic has taken a negative toll on footfall on Oxford’s high street, and thus want to diversify the centre, which would no longer be exclusively used for retail.

Adam Smith, from Lothbury Investment Management, said in a comment to the Oxford Mail that: “There have been dramatic changes in the retail sector since the Clarendon Centre first opened in 1984.”

He suggested that a range of new uses is being proposed for the shopping centre. Hence, in addition to retail, restaurants and cafes, they are also exploring how laboratory facilities, student accommodation, and further office space can be provided with the redesign of the venue.

Smith added: “At the heart of the redevelopment will be a new public space. We hope this will add to the famous squares and quadrangles of Oxford and be truly accessible to all. We want this to become a new green oasis in the heart of the city to provide an area in which people can relax, work and play in a safe, inspiring environment.”

When informed that the new redesign of the Clarendon Centre will be a multi-storey building, Smith said that they are “excited to be providing public access to a landscape designed roof space which will showpiece the stunning Oxford skyline.”

The consultancy firm will therefore look into consulting with shoppers and residents about the proposed changes, before submitting an application to the Oxford City Council by the end of this year.

Hence, the project team will be organising a ‘digital drop-in’ on Wednesday 4th November, at 6pm. The event will feature a presentation from the architects, and provide an opportunity for shoppers and residents to submit any queries.

Image credit: YorkshireLad/ Wikimedia Commons. License: CC BY-SA 4.0

University’s REACH Programme receives additional funding to improve water security

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The Foreign, Commonwealth & Development Office (FCDO) has provided new funding to the University of Oxford’s REACH programme, which seeks to improve water security in Africa and Asia.

On 20th October 2020, it was announced that the FCDO’s grant for the programme will extend to 2024 and increase to £22.5 million. REACH, which began in 2015, is a global research programme that focuses on using world-class science to improve policy and practice regarding water security.

Professor Louise Richardson, Vice Chancellor of the University of Oxford, said: “We at Oxford are committed to supporting the next phase of the work in order to improve the lives of over 10 million people who are desperately in need of support. We are very grateful to the Foreign, Commonwealth & Development Office for funding this work and to our many partners across the globe who collaborate with us in advancing the goals of REACH.”

REACH has worked closely with partners such as UNICEF, national governments, private sector companies, and academic institutions. Through these collaborations, the programme has improved water security for over two million people since 2015 in countries such as Kenya, Ethiopia, and Bangladesh.

According to REACH’s Global Strategy for 2020-2024, published on its website, they aim to continue scaling up the project to reach a target population of 10 million people. To do so, they will focus on addressing inequalities across different scales, such as by developing more inclusive decision-making tools. The issue of climate change will also be tackled, which aims to enhance climate communication and improve coordination between water supply and water management sectors.

Crucially, REACH also aims to improve water quality management, such as by guiding the development of strategies to regulate environmental pollution stemming from urban and industrial growth. At the institutional level, REACH will also partner national and local governments to review and reform water security policy and regulation. These efforts work towards achieving the world’s Sustainable Development Goals by 2030, which were set out by the UN.

The COVID-19 pandemic has exposed systemic inequalities and vulnerabilities around the world. According to the University’s press release, Professors Rob Hope and Katrina Charles, who are the Directors of REACH, said: “The pandemic has compounded the severity of the impacts resulting from water-related climate hazards, such as floods, droughts and cyclones… Building water secure institutions reduces the need for and the cost of emergency funding to avoid unnecessary hardship on the most vulnerable, and increases resilience to future risks and shocks.”

Image Credit: DFID/Wikimedia Commons. License: CC BY 2.0

Autumn Goodness: Chickpea Minestrone

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Soup. Found all over the world in a delicious diversity of forms – smooth, noodled, clear, bitty – soup is perhaps the ultimate autumn comfort food. From simple vegetable bouillon to chicken soup, known as Jewish penicillin for its health-giving qualities; from minestrone, a humble Italian soup made from leftover pasta and bulked up with vegetables and pulses, to Lobster bisque served up in white tablecloth restaurants, there are as many soups as there are people who make them. 

When I was little, my mother would make us soups in various shades of red, orange, brown, and green. I have to admit, however, that I was not the best soup-eater back then;it was only after going to university that I came to appreciate it. For some mysterious reason, no soup could match that thick, burning-hot homely bowl, no matter which college kitchen, no matter how many croutons were perched on top, no matter how expensive the formal hall. Now that I’m on my year abroad I find myself making soup every week automatically, trying to bring a bit of home into my white-washed student apartment. The following recipe started off as a pasta e ceci, a tasty and sustaining traditional Italian peasant dish, and ended up closer to a minestrone. It may be flavour-packed but it only requires one pan, and shockingly few fresh ingredients, making it the ultimate student kitchen fare: cheap, delicious, simple, and nutritious! 

The following recipe makes four portions. I usually eat one straight away, put one in the fridge for the following day, and put the remaining two in the freezer for when I’m feeling lazy. Alternatively, make it for your flatmates on a cold autumn evening and finish it off in one sitting. Blankets and film night highly recommended. 

Ingredients:

1 carrot, peeled, and cut into small cubes  

2 onions (one can be substituted for a stalk of celery if your fridge is super well supplied!), finely diced 

3 cloves of garlic, finely chopped 

200g frozen spinach 

Tin of chopped tomatoes 

Jar of chickpeas 

Any small pasta shape, though small gomiti (elbows!) work wonders 

Vegetable stock cube 

Olive oil 

Method:

Heat some oil in a saucepan on medium. While this is warming up, prepare your carrot and onion. Add these to the saucepan and cook for eight minutes until soft but not burnt, adding the finely chopped garlic two minutes before the end. Crumble the stock cube into the pot and add the tin of tomatoes. Fill up the empty tin with water, swill around to collect any tasty tomato bits hiding in the metal ridges, and pour into the saucepan. Allow to bubble on a low heat for another ten minutes with the lid on, then add in your chickpeas and frozen spinach and cook for four more minutes with the lid on. At this point, I highly recommend letting your soupy stew cool down, as you would with a ribollita, to allow the flavours to mingle and develop. If you don’t have the time, don’t worry, it will still be delicious! 

If you’re planning on serving it all in one go, you can add the pasta shapes directly into the pan and cook for the time stated on the packet. Smaller pasta shapes with a shorter cooking time work better. If planning on putting a couple of portions in the freezer, cook 50g pasta in a separate pan. When al dente, add to your soup brought back up to simmering. Don’t bother draining the pasta too well – a bit of pasta water is not a bad thing! 

Photo Credit: Isobel Sanders

Society Eats: Hungary

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In my first few weeks in Oxford as a fresher, I offered to make a Hungarian meal for some of my friends  one evening. I struggled for some time to cater to the numerous vegetarians (often dismissed as  ridiculous weirdos by way too many Hungarians) since the first dozen foods that came to my mind were all based on rather fatty meat. I eventually came up with lángos, a flat dough deep-fried and served with extra-thick sour cream and cheese on top, which is a classic street food in Hungary. From the glee on the faces and the praise my lángos received, it was obvious that the adoration was not just exaggerated politeness from my friends. Yet no one asked for seconds. The food was so stodgy that people could only concentrate on peaceful digestion. And that’s the essence of Hungarian cuisine: delicious and distinctive flavours, and excess that is more suitable for feasts than everyday meals. No wonder that according to an OECD report, Hungary has the highest obesity rate in adults among its European members.

Put bluntly, Hungarian foods are made up of grease, paprika, gravy, meat, paprika, a bit more grease, and bread to help absorb it all – at least, that is the stereotype. At first sight, this doesn’t seem quite enticing. But while it’s certainly true that almost every Hungarian food is rather heavy, a more nuanced view emerges on closer inspection with a wide variety of soups, pottages, stews, dumplings and different forms of confectionery. Alongside paprikás and goulash (gulyás, named after cattle herders), which tick many of the boxes above with beef, paprika and grease galore, there is a chilled, sweet fruit soup with redcurrants, blackberries and sour cherries. Some of the recipes are just different variants of the ones used in other countries, such as lecsó, which is somewhat similar to ratatouille; crêpes in Hungary are filled with jam or sweet quark and raisins but more special recipes include chocolate and walnuts, or – you’d never guess – meat stew. In reality, paprika is not that dominant but gives room to other spices as well, like garlic, black pepper and horseradish, to name just a few. The cuisine then is more characterized by diversity and experimentation with different forms than simply eating paprika.

What accounts for this diversity is in great part that Hungarians are a motley group of people who have been exposed to all sorts of other peoples over the centuries. The Hungarians (also called Magyars) were nomads that came to the Carpathian Basin and mixed with the locals as they founded their state a millennium ago. In the tempestuous centuries afterwards, amidst wars, migration and changing state boundaries, Hungarians were influenced by German, Slavic, Turkish and Jewish cultures, making the country a crucible of different peoples. This phenomenon is actually not uncommon in the region, whose name and boundary have always been subject to debate: it’s usually called East-Central Europe, but some describe it as “In-between Europe”, a territory hedged between Germans in the west, Russians in the east and (formerly) the Ottoman Turks in the south. In this world, the co-existence and interaction of various cultures have been the norm for centuries, and Hungarian cuisine ought to be seen in this light. It is particularly apparent in alcohol consumption: a strong beer culture came from the west (although not as strong as in Czech lands), a wine culture from the Mediterranean (from which the internationally renowned Tokaji brand emerged), and spirits from the east, with the fruity pálinka as an example. At the same time, some foods are not distinctively Hungarian but are characteristic of the region as a whole and each national cuisine has its own little tweak and name on them. Smetana (and its variants in Slavic tongues) and tejföl (in Hungarian) are the same forms of sour cream, while ćevapi (in Croatian) and mici (in Romanian) are similar minced meat rolls. 

What makes the Hungarian cuisine so distinct to others is that it is ultimately a subsistence cuisine: it developed in a time of food scarcity and for a body that sometimes had to endure prolonged periods of time without access to nutrition. So, the exaggerated importance of meat in the diet makes sense not just because of the nomadic past but also because Hungary was constantly ravaged by wars; keeping your calories in mobile livestock was more rational than keeping them in crops that could be easily scorched by pillaging armies. Much of what we see today as Hungarian cuisine developed from a poor man’s diet and became a national icon only later on. 

As a disclaimer, Hungarians don’t always eat all this heavy stuff – most of the food consumed day to day is international (or anational for that matter). But there is a persistent view in Hungarian that having a good meal involves eating until you feel your stomach explode, for which a greasy main course and creamy dessert form the fastest route. Personally, I could never in my life resist the temptation to put an unreasonably large heap of paprikás with dumplings on my plate, even when I knew that it wouldn’t end well. Pushy grannies with snide remarks about how thin you are get offended if you ask for mercy with watery eyes and your belt loosened after only the third course. True, just as everywhere else in Europe, health consciousness is rising: students are encouraged to do more exercise, while taxes on sugar, fat and salt are high in an effort to trim waistlines; new cycling lanes are being introduced in Budapest, companies offering weight-reducing diets and food flourish. But whatever changes are taking place, they are incremental. The Hungarian obsession with getting a massive feast and feeling well-fed is borne with a sense of pride. Just recently, out of curiosity, a few friends and I embarked on a disastrous quest to consume an entire Dobos cake, a five-layer chocolate buttercream concoction topped with glazed caramel, in one sitting, leaving us, as one would expect, in a state of delirious regret. 

And yet there’s a reason I’m absolutely in favour of Hungarian cuisine: it is indeed ideal for feasting. Of course, this food is not meant to be eaten every day. But as every formal-loving fellow Oxonian would surely agree, we humans live to eat, not exclusively eat to live. The key to it is avoiding excess: it only becomes a sinful indulgence if you try to substitute your daily panini from Taylors for Hungarian food on a regular basis – it’s merely an earthly pleasure if you try it out once in a while to reward yourself. And pleasure it is. You just allow your palate to venture into an exciting new territory of unusual and rich tastes that drive you far from the dull and conventional impulses of your routine day. That sense of guilt coming with it only intensifies the experience. 

Image via Flickr / Dennis Jarvis

All treat, no terror – Halloween horrors for scardy cats

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This year, Halloween is probably going to involve a movie night-in rather than a night out on the town. But not to fear! The holiday will still be tons of fun with this library of the best, not-too-scary Halloween viewing material. If you’re anything like me – and by “like me”, I mean incapable of watching Coraline without covering your eyes – then this list is for you. Enjoy!

When you want the comfort of the classics

It’s the Great Pumpkin, Charlie Brown (1966)

When I watched this as a child, I identified with Linus because I also had a blanket which I clung onto back then (and OK, sometimes even now). The Great Pumpkin is pretty much a security blanket in the form of a television special. It’s best enjoyed with a mug of hot chocolate in hand.

Edward Scissorhands (1990)

This film is a critical study of American suburbia and how society alienates outsiders. It’s also an excellent source of costume inspiration. Johnny Depp as Edward is all soulful eyes and lethal hands. Despite his Freddy-Krueger-esque appearance, he uses his shears for good – making topiaries and carving ice sculptures in grand romantic gestures and giving cool haircuts to his neighbours (both humans AND dogs). Swoon-worthy!

The Rocky Horror Picture Show (1975)

Rocky Horror is a wild ride. It is hard to put the essence of this masterpiece into words, but for anybody who hasn’t seen it, here is the plot in a nutshell: newly engaged couple Brad and Janet stumble upon a castle of singing, dancing aliens and then there is a series of events involving a murder, cannibalism, some Mickey mouse ears, and a coup. Enough said.

When you want to live vicariously through on-screen Halloween hijinks

Any/every Halloween episode from Brooklyn Nine-Nine

Brooklyn Nine-Nine does a Halloween heist episode every season, and they just keep on getting better. They have everything you could want out of the heist genre – moves and countermoves, a big reveal at the end, and of course, a cool reward at stake (the title of Amazing Human/Genius). My personal favourite is Season 7’s “Vallow Easter”, because it has the chaos of three heists packed into one episode, and a montage of a corgi running through the police station set to appropriately dramatic music.

Practical Magic (1998)

Nicole Kidman and Sandra Bullock star as sisters and powerful witches. But with great power comes a great curse – every man they fall in love with ends up dead. Obviously, that makes dating a little tricky! And as if that isn’t enough trouble, they have to deal with the evil spirit of an ex-boyfriend who comes back to life. Kidman and Bullock’s sisterly bond is the best, and it pulls them through all the aforementioned events and more. Plus, bonus points for the sisters’ aunts, who are total scene-stealers and can make margaritas using magic.

When you want to laugh

What We Do in the Shadows (2014)

Four vampire flatmates walk into a bar. This sounds like the start of a bad joke, but it’s actually a scene from Taika Waititi’s horror-mockumentary. The movie opens with four vampires having a flat meeting to confront 183-year-old Deacon for slacking off on dishwashing and 862-year-old Petyr for refusing to clean up the human remains he has lying about. So, you know, relatable flatmate problems. What We Do in the Shadows will have you hooked and cracking up from the get-go.

The Craft (1996)

Mean Girls meets Heathers + revenge plots by teenage witches = The Craft, a.k.a. the Halloween movie of your dreams. When the bus driver says to the girls, “You girls watch out for those weirdos”, and they respond, “We are the weirdos, mister”, I felt that in my bones. This one is a must-see.

£1m will fund Oxford’s COVID-19 immunisation research

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A £1 million grant will fund Oxford’s research into the immunity of recovered COVID-19 patients.

The University of Oxford Medical Science will research the strength of antibody response in recovered patients and how long immunity may last.

The project will be led by Professor Paul Klenerman, whose team has also worked on the immune response to diseases such as HIV.

The University has partnered with Oxford University Hospitals to test thousands of healthcare workers. Those who test positive will take part in further research to understand their immunity to the virus.

The findings will help communities understand how to deal with the pandemic while a vaccine is not available. The data will be used by Oxford professor Sarah Walker, who is working with the Office for National Statistics on the COVID-19 Infection Survey. The Survey tracks the spread of coronavirus throughout the UK.

Gavin Screaton, Head of the Medical Sciences Division, said: “There are still many unanswered questions relating to COVID-19 immunity and the scientists and their teams hope to deliver information in the coming months which will better our understanding of the virus and help the government work out how to manage the pandemic moving forwards and protect the NHS from being overwhelmed.”

Research has shown that some recovered patients could be re-infected within a year. A recent study found that immunity against infection may last for at least five to seven months.

The research is being funded by a £1 million grant from the Huo Family Foundation.. A statement from the Foundation said “thousands of lives could be saved” through the research. Since 2009, it has donated over $41 million to projects in the UK, US, and China. The Foundation has previously funded research at Oxford into young people’s mental health in the digital age.

Pre-Christmas lockdown considered for English universities

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The government is considering a two-week lockdown for universities in England from 8th-22nd December, it has been reported.

Boris Johnson has vowed to “get students home for Christmas”. The aim of the lockdown would be to control the spread of coronavirus as close to a million students return to their families. Students would be required to isolate for this period, with all teaching taking place online.

The proposal will cause complications for those universities whose teaching will have finished before the specified end date. Michaelmas term at Oxford ends on 5th December, and on 4th December at Cambridge, so it is unclear whether students would need to isolate.

Jo Grady, general secretary of the University and College Union, criticised the “highly undesirable” suggestion, which has had no input from university students or staff, as “impossible to deliver or oversee”. She tweeted: “This perverse obsession with Christmas is dangerous. Government must focus on the here and now!”

Some university cities are seeing a much higher infection rate within the student population than in the general public, while cases at Oxford University tripled in the week 10-16th October compared to the previous week. Dr Ellen Brooks Pollock, a participant in the Independent Scientific Pandemic Insights Group on Behaviours (SPI-B) said in an interview with Radio 4’s Today programme: “Our analysis suggests that reducing face-to-face teaching to essential teaching only does have the impact of slowing down the rate of spread and preventing more disseminated outbreaks.”

SAGE has advised for all non-essential teaching to be online. However, there are concerns that the plan will come into force too late to be successful. Dr Brooks Pollock told the Today programme that if infection is already prevalent, then “having this quiet period at the end of term is unlikely to prevent outbreaks within halls of residence.”

Larissa Kennedy, president of the National Union of Students, told LBC radio, “students just aren’t the homogeneous group that the government seems to think they are” and that they should not be treated differently. She spoke of the “horrendous conditions” that isolating students are already living in, with food packages and toilet roll failing to be delivered.

One Oxford student told Cherwell: “I would be happy enough to stay in Oxford during a Christmas lockdown – I trust that I’d be provided for and it would be cool to see my college all festively decorated.” However, another called the plan “frustrating”, saying that, after a term where “mental health has already taken a sharp decline”, a pre-Christmas lockdown would “take away the light at the end of the tunnel.”

Image Credit: Jiahui Huang. Licence: CC-BY-SA-2.0.