WSU builds on the lessons from Covid

Everything changed when the COVID-19 pandemic swept across the world, and Washington State University was no exception.

But five years later, WSU researchers and educators have built on the lessons of Covid to help move the state forward. WSU is increasing access to lifesaving vaccinations, supporting health care workers, finding ways to make up for lost education, and accelerating research tools and vigilance to monitor diseases that jump from animals to humans.

Researchers at WSU’s Paul G. Allen School for Global Health, for example, are tracking survivors of a 2022 Ebola outbreak in Uganda to learn more about a variant of the disease. WSU scientists at the Washington Animal Disease Diagnostic Laboratory work with state and federal agencies to diagnose and monitor outbreaks of the highly contagious bird flu. And at WSU Pullman laboratories, researchers are working to identify which viruses infecting animals could reproduce in human cells.

A microbiologist in blue protective equipment works at a biosafety cabinet.

The pandemic era still resonates through every educational decision made in a school or even in families.

Johnny Lupinacci

All of this is being done to help prepare for the next pandemic, because it’s likely to spread from animals to people. But which viruses are likely to cause outbreaks? What animals are most likely to spread disease? And how do environmental factors contribute to outbreaks? Those are questions WSU researchers are working to answer.

“I go home at night feeling like I’ve done something important,” said Kevin Snekvik, executive director of the Washington Animal Disease Diagnostic Lab.

During the pandemic that lab processed 80,000 human COVID-19 tests, part of WSU’s outreach to Washington residents. Another WSU effort developed a first-in-the-country course to train pharmacy technicians to give immunizations. It rolled out in partnership with the American Pharmacists Association in February 2020. Over the past five years more than 139,000 pharmacy techs have taken the training.

“It was all hands on deck during the pandemic, just to make sure that everyone who wanted to be vaccinated could get their shots,” said Kimberly McKeirnan, a professor in the College of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences who led the development of the test. “We were able to help meet the need in communities by building up the workforce. That makes me feel really good.”

Hundreds of WSU nursing and pharmacy students also volunteered to give vaccinations in schools and nursing homes, in homeless shelters and clinics around the state. Since then, the WSU College of Nursing has emphasized caregiver wellbeing, in recognition of the toll the pandemic took on the nation’s nursing workforce.

Two people in face masks and shields wearing full protective clothes working at an outdoor Covid-19 testing site in 2020.
A person using a laptop to attend an online class with multiple participants.

Five years on, it’s clear that one of the biggest impacts of the pandemic was to education. Students and teachers had to adapt virtually overnight to Zoom screens and online learning. Lack of technology, stress and mental health concerns, and different ways of learning and teaching made education unpredictable and often difficult.

Johnny Lupinacci, associate professor at the WSU College of Education, said the pandemic highlighted issues that are informing research and policy today.

“It’s good to revisit these conversations from the pandemic,” Lupinacci said. “The pandemic era still resonates through every educational decision made in a school or even in families.”

Tell Your Story

Small black dog with large upright ears wearing protective tinted goggles while a vet passes a wand instrument over her.

Rehab isn’t just for humans

WSU Veterinary Teaching Hospital offers continuum of care for animal patients.
A researcher wearing a full-body protective suit, head covering, and gloves holding up a bee hive frame covered in bees.

Bees on the brink

WSU scientists are fighting to save honey bees from multiple threats.
Two people wearing safety glasses examine a long wooden beam made of glued-together boards.

Mass timber on the rise

Light, strong, and sustainable, “mass timber” is gaining traction in the United States, in part because of research and development at Washington State University.
A black-and-white dog calmly having its eyes checked by a veterinarian while another looks on.

At WSU, the animal doctors are in

Washington State University’s Veterinary Teaching Hospital cares for some 20,000 animals each year.
Two older adults, both wearing WSU Cougar branded shirts, smiling at each other as they walk together in the woods.

Growing older, living better

Americans are aging fast, and Washington State University is preparing for that future.
A microbiologist in blue protective equipment works at a biosafety cabinet.

WSU builds on the lessons from Covid

Everything changed when the COVID-19 pandemic swept across the world, and Washington State University was no exception.
Bearded person reading the label on a meat product while grocery shopping.

“We worry so you don’t have to”

WSU’s sophisticated laboratories and trained scientists are at the regional and national forefront of food security.
A person testing a robotic apple picking device that uses white silicone "fingers" to grip an apple.

Robotic gripper could offer a helping hand in the apple orchard

Robots could make apple-picking safer for farmworkers, by harvesting on days when there’s too much wildfire smoke to be outside, or it’s too hot.
A doctor checking a person with a stethoscope in a mobile clinic.

Health for the whole person

At Washington State University, doctors, nurses, pharmacists and other health care providers learn to focus on a patient’s whole life.
A person pouring liquid into a sample jar while another looks on.

Students help solve salmon puzzle

A team that included scientists from Washington State University learned what was killing salmon in urban streams in the Northwest.
Monica Carrillo-Casas, Murrow Fellow, reading news into a microphone.

Murrow News Fellowship puts more local reporters on the beat

WSU-led program bolsters the state’s news ecosystem.
Three people working with soil samples.

Partners in the field

Building on almost a century of collaboration between Washington State University and the Kalispel Tribe.
A grizzly bear rolling a cooler while another sniffs the ground nearby.

WSU grizzlies put coolers to the test

Products that survive an hour against the bears can be labeled “bear-resistant.”
A gravel path winds through flowers, trees, and other plants.

Master Gardeners know all the dirt

WSU Extension has educated the public to become garden experts for more than 50 years.
Two people testing a softball on measuring equipment.

“Bat Lab” targets the science of the ballpark

At Washington State University’s Sports Science Laboratory, the crack of a bat against a ball is the sound of science.
Child holding up familia coug shirt at New Coug Orientation.

High expectations, high support for first gen

Innovative programs help first-gen students at WSU navigate their path to success.
Medical student checking a patient with a stethoscope.

Community care is the curriculum

Medicine, nursing and pharmacy students at WSU deliver care in community settings across the state.
Medical person giving a shot to a child.

WSU on the ground in East Africa

Infectious disease experts identify and track emerging viruses before they can spread, and bring new approaches to old diseases.