Ok, but one of the earlier posts said this:
That wasn't a statement about being happy kids could get vaccinated. That was a statement suggesting they were happy the quarantine policies were going to stick it to antivaxxers. |
| If the quarantine policies nudge people to get their kids vaccinated, I have zero problem with that. |
And screw the younger kids that can't get vaccinated in the meantime? How big of you. |
Honestly the people screaming now the loudest to reverse the policy are the ones who don’t want their kids to be vaccinated. Oh well- we are onto to your. |
Based on what, the fantasies in your head? I want them to change the policy NOW because elementary-aged kids won't be fully vaccinated until early/mid-December at the earliest, and that's too much time for needless quarantines. It's possible that people can support vaccinating their kids AND sane covid policy. |
Obviously that is not what I meant, since the younger kids can't get vaccinated yet. |
DP. Once the vaccines for 5-11s get approved, that will cover all students in MCPS buildings (except for the rare vaccine allergy case). Will the quarantine policies change for the unvaccinated? I think we should have test to stay everywhere now, but will there be less incentive to have it in place in once approval for 5-11s is given? |
Then you're being willfully oblivious to the impact of the quarantine policy. Maintaining the quarantine policy as written- which you seem to want to do to "nudge people to get their kids vaccinated" means screwing over the young kids that can't vaccinated. If that isn't what you meant, then you should be looking for the quarantine policy to be removed, and a student vaccine mandate instituted (which would obviously only apply to groups that can actually be vaccinated). |
My kids are under 5 and in MCPS buildings. There are also thousands more outside of MCPS buildings that are covered under the MDH requirements that MCPS is following. |
Honestly, I hear you on that one, and I'm nearly as frustrated with them as the people that to keep quarantines and expand surveillance testing. I'm very confident in the safety and efficacy of the vaccine in kids, although I can somewhat understand the hesitancy when the initial authorization decision for the age cohort is based on ~1500 kids getting the vaccine. But that's not really the reason most of them are against the vaccine. My kids will get it right away. We've got a high-risk health care worker in the family. Whether it's the kids passing it to the parent, or the parent passing it to the kids, both would be relatively bad. |
Hard to believe when the loudest ones screaming are against child vaccines, against mask wearing, and THEY ARE ALL IN PUBLIC HEALTH. It's actually scary how convinced they are they are correct and everyone else is wrong. |
Huh? |
This whole thread is about a bunch of cranky anti-maskers trying to bring everybody else down. MCPS has done a stellar job containing the spread. The last thing they should do is mess with a good thing to appease a few butites. |
You're forgetting that schools everywhere never became the hotbeds of transmission some hoped for, regardless of their measures. We know a lot more today- of course we should base our current and future policies on what we today, not what we feared a year ago. |
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Based on what I'm reading here I see there's significant misinformation on the MCPS quarantine policy.
When an elementary school, unvaccinated kid is quarantined for being a close contact, the rule is that the kid will stay home for 10 days and monitor symptoms. No test is necessary. And 1, 2, 3 or 20 negative tests won't allow the kid to return to school sooner. My kid has been quarantined. We signed up for random testing at the beginning of the school year. The school also has rapid tests available. On the day my daughter was quarantined, they were doing random tests at the school. Surprising to us, she was sent home without being tested. Moreover, no testing is required at any point for the quarantined kids. Even more shocking is the fact that siblings of the quarantined kid are neither quarantined nor tested either. When our daughter was quarantined, we had to explicitly ask the school to include her in the pool of randomly tested kids. The PCR results, which were negative, took 2 days to arrive. Therefore, we also gave her a rapid test ourselves. Obviously, we wanted to know if she had COVID, and whether we had to isolate her from her siblings. However, per MCPS, this is not required. Responsible parents may do this regardless of MCPS' policy, but for those of you arguing that MCPS is doing a stellar job, I'd say that, per MCPS rules, my kid's twin sister could have potentially infected several kids at the school as well as their parents. It's a very absurd policy indeed. |