Last Updated: March 17, 2020
Authoritative information on the Novel Coronavirus / COVID-19 outbreak may be found at the website of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and the World Health Organization. The CDC also has provided general guidance on Keeping the Workplace Safe.
More specific policy guidance applicable to MSU includes:
Through the Office of the Senior Vice President for Research & Innovation, MSU seeks to avoid—and where necessary, ameliorate—adverse effects on the course of research due to the novel coronavirus / COVID-19. Such effects may either be direct (i.e., COVID-19 infection) or indirect (e.g., degradation of laboratory, art studio, or other safety).
Protecting the health of the general public, research subjects, students and all MSU colleagues is, and must remain, the clear first priority.
Following the protection of human health, other special considerations may guide interventions for impact avoidance or amelioration. They include:
Changes in the operations of specific units or activities can be found in the links to the left. Individual faculty members, departments, schools, colleges, and other units who are experiencing or foresee such impacts are invited to contact individual units or OSVPRI central staff members as early as possible.
All OSVPRI units remain operational. Many staff members are working at home in accord with the guidance from the MSU Office of the President.
Our central office and its reporting units can be reached via their normal office phones and e-mail addresses during normal office hours.
Researchers who have need for out-of-hours assistance, or who cannot reach any needed research-related contact, may call any of the following numbers—24 hours per day, seven days per week:
Out of Office Needs | Contact Number |
---|---|
Police / Fire / Ambulance Emergency | 911 |
Urgent Animal Care | 517-884-8527 |
Prof. Paul M. Hunt Senior Associate Vice President, Research & Innovation |
517-285-5646 |
Prof. Doug Gage Assistant Vice President, Research & Innovation |
527-974-2770 |
In light of possible further restriction of on-campus laboratory work, all MSU faculty and research teams should conduct immediate planning for significant reductions or suspension of on-campus research activity.
Plans should include:
Interruption of laboratory work (here taken to include farm-based activities) obviously poses special issues, including those related to human subject protection, animal care, and chemical, biological, and radiological safety. Should the decision to restrict non-essential research be made, we can anticipate that exemptions will be rare.
Collectively, we are all aware that very important research and scholarly activity (e.g., data analysis, manuscript preparation, progress reporting, invention disclosure, refereeing, etc.) can be conducted remotely. Hence, MSU expects research stipendiary and salary support for funded project participants will be continued during the COVID-19 response period. Federal guidance on this matter is understood to be in development, and it will be shared when available.
Protecting the health of individuals in the face of epidemics has been a recognized necessity within the research and creative scholarship landscape for centuries – e.g., Newton's departure from Cambridge University during a bubonic plague outbreak is widely known.
Today, our actions may appear extreme, but the irreducible bottom line is: protecting the health of the general public, research subjects, students, colleagues, and oneself is, and must remain, the clear first priority.
Everything we do before a pandemic will seem alarmist. Everything we do after a pandemic will seem inadequate. This is the dilemma we face, but it should not stop us from doing what we can to prepare. We need to reach out to everyone with words that inform, but not inflame. We need to encourage everyone to prepare, but not panic.Michael O. Leavitt, Former Secretary of HHS, 2007