Right. 1.5x is in the same ballpark. I would consider 11.18 per 100,000 and 17.5 per 100,000 to be roughly similar. And we're talking about rates here, not overall numbers, so it doesn't particularly matter that one is for the year while the other is for a few months. The *rate* isn't likely to change much. Though, I'll note that they're measuring very different things. The motor vehicle rate is the overall morality rate of car accidents, while the COVID rate is just the morality rate *if you happen to get infected.* In other words, for children, even if you expect everyone to get COVID, the risk of death appears to be roughly on par with the risk of dying in a car accident. |
I think it's fine if the kids are same age (or minimum 2 different grades) and you hire a "teacher" who somebody other than the parents. My first and second grade were spent with another grade in the same room. |
Actually, we’ve been saying it over and over. DL for grades 3+. Homeschool before/after work and a little on weekends for k-2. Let the younger kids play during your work day, as long as you’re working from home. If you’re not working from home, the best of bad choices is either a nanny for just you or a small center that is being very careful about cleaning and distancing AND will supervise dl. |
What about parents who send their kids to daycare? And SACC? Are all those on your $hitlist as well? |
There have been 7 child covid-related deaths among Florida residents. http://ww11.doh.state.fl.us/comm/_partners/covid19_report_archive/pediatric_report_latest.pdf |
So, podding is very different than these things from what I've seen on DCUM and in the media. It's understandable that parents of young kids would want their kids in daycare while they work and for older kids, essential workers and people who can't WFH it seems childcare at school would make sense. It's a benefit risk equation and the benefits of not keeping a child home alone might outweigh the risks of the virus for many, and some simply don't have a choice. The pods aren't about keeping kids safe, or about childcare. I'm sure there are some good reasons to make sure kids are getting social activity or help with school, though I don't think it means you have to pod with 6 families and a tutor. There are safer ways I'm sure. Further, you need to stop and ask yourself why you even care what me or other anon posters on this website think of your plan. You aren't going to convince me and others that pods are okay, though you really seem to want to. What does it matter? Do what you want to do. |
There are other outcomes to worry about from this virus aside from death. If that is the only metric you care about, no child has ever died from not being placed in a learning pod. |
Social isolation can absolutely have deadly consequences for teenagers and adults. |
You can find ways to not be socially isolated that don't include what some of these pods describe, which are several families mixing kids INSIDE most of the day. |
You aren't supposed to gather in groups larger than 10, so confused how this even works. most pods are 2-6 kids. |
Is that 10 indoors? I thought up to 50 was okayed? |
It's probably just play dates. |
We’re discussing young children, not teens and adults... |
+1 thank you for explaining this, immediate PP. Seems so many people don’t understand or care to look deeper at the statistics and how they are PROPORTIONATE to whatever other metrics you’re using to compare them with! You can’t just read headlines and think you’re fully informed. |
You are only reading headline about low mortality rates and not informing yourself of the other consequences of this virus. |