We can fix all of those things through programs. We can’t fix death. |
Yes, through programs, including schools. PP, I understand that you're anxious, but "ban everything that results in death" is bad public-health policy. There are costs and benefits to every decision. For example, the costs of banning the sale of crib bumpers are very low, compared to the benefits. (Costs: crib bumper makers will have to redo their product line, people who want to buy crib bumpers will find it more difficult to do so. Benefits: lower risk of suffocation in crib bumpers by babies.) In contrast, the costs of keeping kids out of school are very high, compared to the benefits. Especially because it seems, from preliminary data, that schools are not a major source of covid spread. |
Based on all the publicly available data since the beginning of this, each one of those predictions have a probability of 98% to be true. If you call that wishful thinking so be it. I'm just curious analyzing all this. |
No we can't. |
Really? I have a graduate degree in Public Health, so I am used to thinking in terms of populations. Of course, it is bad to die or have long term health consequences from COVID. It is also bad if even more people die from or have long term consequences from heart disease because they gained weight. That's how it works. |
Are you the "gained weight" PP? Can you please explain how this is relevant to school next fall? |
Obviously, she is making the point that there are numerous negative public health consequences of lockdowns. It is relevant to keeping schools closed because that will force more people to remain at home to supervise their kids. If you used to ride your bike to work, for instance, you are not doing that anymore. If you are already stretched between facilitating DL and getting your work done, it may be hard to fit in workouts. Not to mention kids are missing out on sports. |
My undergrad degree is in public health. While some people have gained weight in quarantine, many have also lost weight by having more home cooking and more time to exercise. Quarantine doesn’t have to lead to obesity. |
Sure, and if you used to have a long car commute to work, for instance, you are not doing that anymore. If you used to eat out a lot, you are not doing that anymore. Not to mention kids have most of the day to be outside. Plus, how is this relevant to school next fall? We are not talking about stay-at-home orders. We are talking about school next fall. |
DP, and I think the weight gain isn’t the best comparative outcome here. More: why is it preferable for children to be beaten to death by their parents, or to experience life-long consequences of trauma (and good luck fixing those), than it is for teachers to take a small risk of serious outcomes and even smaller risk of death from COVID-19? Those are more the outcomes we’re talking about. Yes, I picked the extreme examples, but claiming that we’re sentencing teachers to die by asking them to teach in-person this Fall is also extreme. |
PP here and I agree. If I remember correctly, the PP originally mentioned weight gain as one possible negative consequence among many. |
Yes, it is ridiculous hyperbole, and evidence of the mass hysteria we are facing when trying to have this discussion. Don't get me started on parents worrying about their kids safety at school because of Covid... |
Right. Ridiculous hyperbole for teachers to be worried about dying from an infectious disease that has killed 110,000 Americans in the past three months but totally reasonable for people to be screaming about “life long trauma” and children being “beaten to death”. Give me a break. If you beat your child to death it is no one else’s fault. Now you’re likening school closure to murder. If you kill your children or allow yourself to become obese during quarantine those are personal failings. It isn’t the government, the school system, or anyone else’s fault. People need to learn some personal responsibility. |
Obviously/hopefully PP is not beating his children. She is referring to public statistics. |
Of course I'm not beating my children. I was referring to the reports of increased rates of severe child abuse going on right now--as evidenced by an increase in cases presenting to EDs--coupled with a decrease in reports to CPS, in all likelihood because there aren't eyes on these endangered kids right now. That's real. So is the disengagement of many kids, most of them already at risk due to poverty, from the educational system. Not real: that all, or even most, teachers are at high risk of severe disease or death from COVID. Also not real: that childcare facilities are sites of significant disease outbreak. Teachers complain that older kids can't social distance; how do you think the toddlers in essential daycares do that? They don't. And yet, somehow, the overwhelming majority of those open have operated safely for several months now *without major outbreaks*. Look, you can be scared all you want. But you can't claim "science" and "data" when you ignore the science and the data that don't support your position. |