Sport and isolation in a time of COVID-19

26 March 2020 | Story Helen Swingler. Read time 6 min.
While sportspeople and spectators may find the cancellation of events tough, UCT&rsquo;s Dr Jeroen Swart believes the pandemic poses the greatest challenge to the world in at least two generations. <b>Photo </b><a href="https://unsplash.com/photos/WUehAgqO5hE" target="_blank">Unsplash</a>.
While sportspeople and spectators may find the cancellation of events tough, UCT’s Dr Jeroen Swart believes the pandemic poses the greatest challenge to the world in at least two generations. Photo Unsplash.

University of Cape Town (UCT) sports physician and exercise scientist Dr Jeroen Swart is back home, in self-isolation after being quarantined in Abu Dhabi in the United Arab Emirates (UAE) with members of the UAE Team Emirates cycling team. He talks about isolation and elite sport in a time of COVID-19.

Swart, as a sports medicine clinician but also as an elite cycling coach and former professional athlete, knows the passion and pain of elite sport.

Based at the Sports Science Institute of South Africa, home to the UCT Research Unit for Exercise Science and Sports Medicine, Swart was once among the country’s top 1 500 m runners in the era of Hezekiél Sepeng and Marius van Heerden.

After a debilitating knee injury, he got on a bike and ended up racing professionally for three years before returning to health sciences to specialise in sports medicine.

UCT’s Dr Jeroen Swart in recent quarantine in the W-Hotal Yas Island. Photo Lorenzo Verdinelli.

Since then he’s been physician for some big-name teams – such as the Ajax Cape Town soccer team – and elite athletes, and has worked with cyclists such as Chris Froome, Jan Ullrich and South Africaʼs Ashleigh Moolman Pasio, bronze-medal winner in the 2014 Commonwealth Games. He was also head of the playersʼ medical centre for the FIFA World Cup in 2010.

Medic and coach

In recognition of his expertise in cycling, Swart was appointed as the medical director for UAE Team Emirates, one of the top three teams in global cycling, starting with the 2019 season.

“The team reached out to me in July 2018 to see if I was interested in coming on board as they were making key changes going into the 2019 season,” Swart said.

As medical director he’s responsible for the composition of the medical team (seven doctors), and the development of their medical protocols and all related functions. He travels to the races with the team for approximately 50 days each year, but the responsibilities of coordinating the other doctors and making sure all records are up to date, generating reports and liaising with the athletes’ own doctors back at home is an all-year-round job.

At the time that COVID-19 broke worldwide, Swart was in the UAE with his team, seven riders and 16 staff who were participating at the UAE Tour, a road cycling stage race. Two suspected cases of the virus led to the cancellation of the tour and all participants, staff, press and other personnel were asked to isolate themselves in Abu Dhabi, initially for 72 hours, but some teams, including Swart’s own team, were in quarantine for 16 days.

“In the UAE I learnt to develop a routine. This helped get through the days more easily.”

Now at home, in self-isolation for another 14 days after travelling, Swart said things have looked up.

“Being in total isolation is the hardest but being home with the family makes things significantly easier.”

No sport today

But COVID-19 has pulled the rug out from under sport; meets and events have been cancelled or postponed, leaving competitors (and spectators) in a vacuum. In professional cycling, the calendar usually runs from mid-January until early October.

“As a result there are races which are a priority at all times. The peak is obviously the Tour de France in July.”

The effects of cancellations can be devastating, said Swart.

 

“The cancellation of events creates a significant void in terms of their drive and motivations.”

“Athletes have a primary focus of achieving success and results. The cancellation of events creates a significant void in terms of their drive and motivations. Our process is to redirect their drives towards ... staying healthy and performing altered training regimes to maintain base levels of fitness.”

It’s also an opportunity to work on weaknesses.

“By making the process the focus we can maintain interest and drive and hopefully [will] be better prepared for when the racing resumes,” he said.

Four continents
How is his team coping?

“We’ve communicated with athletes and staff on an ongoing basis as the events around COVID-19 have evolved. It’s a situation that is constantly changing and the athletes are scattered on four different continents. We therefore need to keep up to date with the changing protocols for their specific countries and assist where we can with advice.”

The cancellation of sports meetings is tough on athletes and spectators. Photo Lorenzo Verdinelli.

The sudden withdrawal of competitive sport events has been equally devastating for sport-loving fans and followers, many now also in self-isolation, who find themselves with nothing to watch on television.

This certainly creates a great emptiness for many people, said Swart, both in terms of viewing sport and the social interactions and camaraderie engendered around sport.

“Sport provides an important source of entertainment and social interaction ... and it can be an emotional catalyst. Reruns of past events are one way to fill this void but there will be a significant number of people who will be left with a lot of time – and frustration – on their hands.”

He’s hopeful that some events will be able to take place without spectators in six to eight weeks’ time. Spectatorless sport meetings may be required for some time before normal sporting activities can recommence. 

And, as Swart predicted, the Olympics have been shifted to 2021.

Not to be trifled with

While sportspeople and spectators may find the going tough, Swart believes the pandemic poses the greatest challenge to the world in at least two generations.

“We will see an impact that will last for years to decades into the future. We’re still early on in what will be a distressing and challenging period, lasting many months. However, this will illustrate how well humanity can adapt and find novel ways to cope with what can seem like insurmountable problems. I’m confident that we will all rise to meet the challenge and overcome it.”


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UCT’s response to COVID-19

COVID-19 is a global pandemic that caused President Cyril Ramaphosa to declare a national disaster in South Africa on 15 March 2020 and to implement a national lockdown from 26 March 2020. UCT is taking the threat of infection in our university community extremely seriously, and this page will be updated with the latest COVID-19 information. Please note that the information on this page is subject to change depending on current lockdown regulations.

Minister of Health, Dr Joe Phaahla, has in June 2022 repealed some of South Africa’s remaining COVID-19 regulations: namely, sections 16A, 16B and 16C of the Regulations Relating to the Surveillance and the Control of Notifiable Medical Conditions under the National Health Act. We are now no longer required to wear masks or limit gatherings. Venue restrictions and checks for travellers coming into South Africa have now also been removed.

In July 2022, the University of Cape Town (UCT) revised its approach to managing the COVID-19 pandemic on UCT campuses in 2022.
Read the latest document available on the UCT policies web page.

 

Campus communications

 
2022

Adjusting to our new environment 16:50, 23 June 2022
VC Open Lecture and other updates 17:04, 13 April 2022
Feedback from UCT Council meeting of 12 March 2022 09:45, 18 March 2022
UCT Council
March 2022 graduation celebration 16:45, 8 March 2022
Report on the meeting of UCT Council of 21 February 2022 19:30, 21 February 2022
UCT Council
COVID-19 management 2022 11:55, 14 February 2022
Return to campus arrangements 2022 11:15, 4 February 2022

UCT Community of Hope Vaccination Centre

On Wednesday, 20 July, staff from the University of Cape Town’s (UCT) Faculty of Health Sciences came together with representatives from the Western Cape Government at the UCT Community of Hope Vaccination Centre at Forest Hill Residence to acknowledge the centre’s significance in the fight against COVID-19 and to thank its staff for their contributions. The centre opened on 1 September 2021 with the aim of providing quality vaccination services to UCT staff, students and the nearby communities, as well as to create an opportunity for medical students from the Faculty of Health Sciences to gain practical public health skills. The vaccination centre ceased operations on Friday, 29 July 2022.

With the closure of the UCT Community of Hope Vaccination Centre, if you still require access to a COVID-19 vaccination site please visit the CovidComms SA website to find an alternative.

 

“After almost a year of operation, the University of Cape Town’s (UCT) Community of Hope Vaccination Centre, located at the Forest Hill residence complex in Mowbray, will close on Friday, 29 July 2022. I am extremely grateful and proud of all staff, students and everyone involved in this important project.”
– Vice-Chancellor Prof Mamokgethi Phakeng

With the closure of the UCT Community of Hope Vaccination Centre, if you still require access to a COVID-19 vaccination site please visit the CovidComms SA website to find an alternative.


Thank You UCT Community

Frequently asked questions

 

Global Citizen Asks: Are COVID-19 Vaccines Safe & Effective?

UCT’s Institute of Infectious Disease and Molecular Medicine (IDM) collaborated with Global Citizen, speaking to trusted experts to dispel vaccine misinformation.



If you have further questions about the COVID-19 vaccine check out the FAQ produced by the Desmond Tutu Health Foundation (DTHF). The DTHF has developed a dedicated chat function where you can ask your vaccine-related questions on the bottom right hand corner of the website.

IDM YouTube channel | IDM website
 

 

“As a contact university, we look forward to readjusting our undergraduate and postgraduate programmes in 2023 as the COVID-19 regulations have been repealed.”
– Prof Harsha Kathard, Acting Deputy Vice-Chancellor: Teaching and Learning

We are continuing to monitor the situation and we will be updating the UCT community regularly – as and when there are further updates. If you are concerned or need more information, students can contact the Student Wellness Service on 021 650 5620 or 021 650 1271 (after hours), while staff can contact 021 650 5685.

 

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