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I never send with a fever or any kind of stomach thing.
And I think there is a special place in hell for people who send kids to school who might vomit unexpectedly. But those coughs? And runny noses? They last forever. If my kid is energetic and feeling fine, they go. And a mask is a courtesy in that case, not a signal that I should have kept them home. |
This is my philosophy too. |
It doesn't defeat the purpose. There's still some risk reduction even if the result is more exposure to others. Who is/how many kids are exposed, how long they're exposed, the viral load--those variables matter. |
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Sounds like there mom missed
Too many days . |
| I work in a high poverty school. Many parents work hourly jobs and if they stay home with their sick kids, they won’t get paid. Too many days not coming to work might mean no more job. I’ve had many sick kids lying in my calm down corner to sleep. Our school nurse can be a b&$@h and usually won’t let sick kids stay in the health room. It’s a sad situation. |
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I work with children, and I have had an upper respiratory virus every day since December 21. I just came down with the third one yesterday. I mask in group settings, but not when I make home visits. I’m so tired of parents who don’t mask their kids or warn me in advance so that I can make the choice to mask. It’s after ring my energy and mindset to the point where I no longer want to work with children and families. A therapist friend of mine used to specialize in working with children but quit working with them entirely because she was tired of getting sick.
I’m not someone who gets sick often either. Typically, if I get a bug it’s just once per winter. Some years I’m not sick at all. |
So just start masking when you make home visits. Why do you need a warning? Just do it, it’s not that complicated. |