Wait— you MUST quarantine even if vaxxed? You can’t test and end the quarantine early? That’s nuts. |
We’ll see. My HS DD is about to miss school for PMS and cramps. |
This has nothing to do with COVID. ER is almost always like that, particularly because there are many people who don't go to regular doctors and just show up at ER. Giving coverage for walk-in clinics with Medicaid would clear up ERs substantially. That said, when I went to ER the second time, it was empty. |
| No one vaccinated is supposed to be quarantining. They are supposed to mask in public and test after 4-5 days. |
Try again, Debbie Downer. Fairfax is the only district showing "slow growth" rather than "surge". |
Cases are not the same as hospitalization. Likely been 100 million cases in the US alone. |
Oh yes — that’s such exciting news! |
| Who cares about cases? Remember, the whole point of closing everything down was to keep hospitals from being overrun. Now we've got a vaccines, hospitals are fine, so...who cares? |
Cases are what’s closing schools for those already back in. |
I hope that you are not an actual parent. Do you understand that to be informative, you need context for the worst case scenarios you are posting. Look at the numbers for this county. Can you understand why what is happening there is not foreshadowing what may happen here. Do you see any differences? https://covidactnow.org/us/mississippi-ms/county/pearl_river_county/?s=21951121 Pearl River County, MS Updated on August 20We aim to update our data by 1 PM EDT daily. Occasionally, when additional review is required, an update can be delayed by several hours. Note that certain data sources that we use (e.g., ICU hospitalizations) are only updated once per week. RISK LEVEL . SEVERE VACCINATION PROGRESS % Vaccinated 39.1% 1+ DOSE Daily new cases 166.7 PER 100K Infection rate 1.27 Positive test rate 27.0% |
UK tests all students twice per week. Not a valid comparison. |
| Cases shouldn't close schools where kids are required to wear masks. No one should have to stay home except kids testing positive. |
This. My DC tested positive with those symptoms. Even if everyone else is fibe, at least keep it that way by OTC testing and isolating from them if necessary. |
You must be the "scientist" posting what people "MUST" do. This is absolutely not true.
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Don't shoot the messenger. That is what is posted on the FCPS HS website. Period. It does not distinguish b/t vaccinated and unvaccinated people. HOWEVER, I saw your post and looked further. On the FCPS general website, it says the following: __________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ "Unvaccinated students who are identified as a close contact with someone with COVID-19 must remain home for 14 days after their last exposure. Fully vaccinated students who are identified as a close contact with someone with COVID-19 do not need to remain home as long as they do not have symptoms. Verification of the status of vaccination will be required before a student may return to school. Verification will be completed by the FCHD contact tracing process. " _______________________________________________________________________________________ So, it isn't entirely clear how long a vaccinated student would need to stay home if they are a close contact of a covid positive person. https://www.fcps.edu/return-school/health-and-safety-guidance-document Here's what it says about kids who stay home with a covid-like symptom: "FCPS will no longer require the SICK STUDENT NOTIFICATION and RETURN to SCHOOL FORM for students who are called in absent with COVID-like symptoms/illness. The student must be fever free for 24 hours without fever-reducing medication." So, I guess if your kid has a runny nose or sore throat and you keep them home, they are good to go back to school the next day if they don't have a fever???? And to add to the confusion, the two topics above the latter statement both talk about being required to fill out the Return to School Form! The communication on this issue is crappy. We are a district of 180,000 students. Every single morning there are going to be at least 1000 students who have a headache, sore throat, congestion, etc. And still we do not have crystal clear guidance on what to do. One website says you have to test negative. The other doesn't mention testing. Who is in charge of this? |