Home » Blog » Meyer Co-authors Article on Safe Singing During the COVID-19 Pandemic

Meyer Co-authors Article on Safe Singing During the COVID-19 Pandemic

Director of the Janette Ogg Voice Research Center and Associate Professor of Voice (Baritone) and Vocal Pedagogy David Meyer, D.M., co-authored “Safer Singing During the SARS-CoV-2 Pandemic: What We Know and What We Don’t,” an article recently published in the Journal of Voice. The publisher agreed to make this article freely accessible to the public during the pandemic.

On June 29, Dr. Meyer was also a featured panelist on “After COVID-19: Concerns For Singers,” a webinar by the National Association of Teachers of Singing (NATS). The webinar examined the risk of singers contracting COVID-19 and how this risk typically centers on three possible outcomes: (1) avoiding COVID-19 infection altogether, (2) contracting COVID-19 and recovering from it and (3) contracting COVID-19 and dying from it. Another outcome that must be considered is contracting COVID-19 and living with its aftereffects. Because these aftereffects can include reduced lung capacity and intubation injuries — byproducts with potentially devastating effects on singers — this webinar was a frank discussion of these and other COVID-19-related concerns. The goal of the webinar was to help singers create their own COVID-19 Risk Assessment and Decision Matrix Tool.

Categories: , , , ,

Recent News

Camilla Hollen and Zoe Star stand with a sign for the Future Africa Campus at the University of Pretoria in South Africa.

Shenandoah University PA Student Presents Research At International Conference

Zoe Star ’24, ’26 attended the International Academy of Physician Associate Educators Conference in South Africa

Mural outside of Allen Dining Hall, painted by artist Sarah Callahan, featuring bright, rich colors, including a sunrise/sunset, pink and blue blossoms, and iconic Shenandoah and Winchester structures.

Mural Makes Over Allen Entrance

Exciting New Look Brings Added Vibrancy To Shenandoah University’s Main Campus

2025 Shenandoah Top Ten

The Shenandoah Top 10 for 2025

As an another exciting year at Shenandoah closes, we’re taking a few moments to look back at our top videos, posts and stories of 2025 – our sesquicentennial year.

The 2025 Shenandoah University Marching Band celebrates in the stands.

Class of 2026 Reflects on the Growth and Evolution of the Marching Band

Seniors become the first students to spend all four years in the band

Monthly Archives