Remember the summer of 2020, when every parent wondered if sending their kid to camp was safe? This report gives us a snapshot from that time, looking at four overnight camps in Maine. It describes the COVID-19 prevention and mitigation strategy they put in place, which is essentially the plan they used to try to stop the virus from spreading among campers and staff.
The report covers what happened from June through August of that year. It tells us what the camps did, but it's important to know what it doesn't tell us. The report doesn't share the main results—we don't learn how many people, if any, actually got COVID-19 at these camps. We also don't know how the camps' strategy compared to doing nothing different, or what specific safety measures were part of their plan.
Because this is just a report and not a full study, we have to be careful. It doesn't give us numbers on outcomes or safety. It doesn't tell us if the plan worked well or not. This means we can't use it to say for sure that these camp strategies are effective. It's simply a description of what was tried in a few specific places during a very uncertain time.