Oregon student positive negative, But she took another test the same day
Oregon student positive negative, But she took another test the same day.
Oregon State University freshman Katie Bruun waited in line outside Reser Stadium around 9 a.m. Friday. It was the first day that students could move into the dorms on campus.
"I was super excited to live in the dorms," she said. "Super excited to be moving out of my parents' house and I love learning situations. I'm a little bit on the nerdier side, so I was super excited for all of my classes."
As part of the moving in process, every student had to take a mandatory COVID-19 test. It was self-administered in front of a trained observer from the university's TRACE Project.
Bruun describes herself as a very scientific person; she's studying for a health sciences major. So, when the testing took place, the way it happened gave Bruun some concerns.
"When you did the test it was do it yourself, which is fine, but you put the test back in the paper, which was unsealed and then you put it in a medical waste box with a bunch of other tests and that, right off the bat, did not sit right with me and I thought it was weird," she said.
Bruun waited about an hour and a half before receiving her results.
"It came back as positive. They gave me a call and one of the doctors on staff said, 'Hey, you tested positive,'" she recalled.
She said it was a scary thought for someone with autoimmune disease issues.
"I knew that if I were to get COVID, I would get hit really, really hard with COVID. So, I was very, very surprised with the results," she said.
Bruun had two choices: stay in an on-campus isolation dorm with all the amenities or isolate at her parents' home in West Linn. She chose the latter.
The same afternoon she took the test at Oregon State, she took another COVID-19 test at her doctor's office in Tigard. This time, with a different result.
"The nurse came back to my car and was like, you came back negative," Bruun said.
Bruun said her family and close friends all took tests, sometimes multiple times, and all of them, she said, came back negative.
"I don't want to blame Oregon State or anything like that, but I still have zero symptoms and I had negative tests across the board and that's why I'm somewhat questioning my positive," Bruun said.
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