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VA Public Schools other than FCPS
Reply to "Daycare testing for runny noses?!"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]Perhaps you now understand why so many of the posts of parents with young kids have stated that they are losing their minds? But yes, OP, it is as nerve wracking and near impossible as you are imagining. [/quote] I've long opposed any of the so called mitigation measures for kids but this one is new in our school so I'm genuinely curious how it works in practice. We will prob pull them sadly and I'm seatching for another option [/quote] Ahh, so you’re one of those people. [/quote] Yes the OP epitomizes the selfishness that has exacerbated the pandemic for almost two years. Cold like symptoms can indicate Covid. The day care should be commended for taking mitigation measures to protect its staff and children under care and to minimize community spread. [/quote] Hate to break it to you but community spread is here. And everywhere. That's what happens with respiratory illness. We don't shut down the world for mild colds, which even you acknowledge this is. [/quote] This is a worldwide pandemic not a normal mild cold. It has killed over 825K Americans. Pediatric inflections and hospitalizations are at an all time high. The described mitigation strategies are reasonable precautions. If people were just more willing to follow the best scientific advice out there, some of the deaths and serious illnesses could have been avoided. But, instead we whine.[/quote] Out of those 825,000 Americans, 250 were kids aged 0-4 years. That is 0.03% of the deaths. Covid is killing unvaccinated adults, not preschoolers.[/quote] But the kids are passing in on to those adults. Also, we don’t know the full scope of possible long-term effects to kids. A recent study showed an increase in diabetes among kids who had COVID. This virus isn’t just a mild cold, it attacks many systems of the body—vascular, pulmonary, neurological, etc. a mild cold may currently represent initial infection but time will tell how kids’ bodies respond to COVID in the long run.[/quote] Ok. So kids can pass it onto adults. But the adults are out eating in restaurants, going on trips, going to house parties, etc. and also spreading it to other adults. It’s just that we make kids take responsibility by sacrificing their normal childhoods and education. So don’t come at me about community spread unless others are willing to sacrifice too.[/quote] Adults should sacrifice too you a 🕳 [/quote] Great. When we shut down the bars and cruise ships, let me know. [/quote] This exactly. Why are you coming for my low risk preschooler first? Let’s mandate vaccinations and shut down all unnecessary frivolous entertainment venues for adults. And prohibit parties and such. And, if you still have overflowing hospitals, you can tell little kids to shove things up their nose every morning, wear masks, stay six feet from their friends, and stay home for 10+ days every other week basically while asking their parents to somehow stay employed without any reliable child care. A lot of us just don’t see the point anymore. This disease is going to be endemic. It is never going away. My kids are so so so unlikely to need hospitalization. I don’t care if they get Covid today or in a few months or in a few years. What difference does it make? And blah blah blah with the small possibility of long covid and diabetes. Nothing is risk free and everything has an opportunity cost. You know what also probably increases your chances of adverse health outcomes? Having unemployed parents or parents stressed out of their minds. Give us a break already. This is equivalent to a cold for kids. Stop asking them to bear the brunt of the social isolation policies. [/quote] Nobody gives a damn about your childish “blah blah blah.” OP can test her kid or leave. The end.[/quote] Here’s the deal: how we going to test our kids if tests are near impossible to come by? How are you going to know if I tested my kid? What’s the incentive for actually testing my kid? Am I supposed to do so out of sympathy for anti-vaxxers? For those at risk that don’t have enough sense to stay away from preschoolers and school age kids and pretty much everyone right now during high community spread? Because it’s hard to care about others in a society that just dismisses your struggles for two years and calls you selfish for wondering how parents are supposed to stay employed and sane without reliable childcare. It seems like those that actually test are going to be running around every morning at 6am to try to find a pharmacy with tests, shelling out $$, shoving things up their kids’ noses and making them cry, and for what? A negative result in all likelihood because home tests are incredibly unreliable. I know someone who was pretty sure they had it, wanted to confirm, and took 4 tests. Only one of the 4 tests was positive. Did you see what happened in the Virginia governor’s race? You think there won’t be a revolt if elected officials keep pushing these inane policies aimed to coddle people with zero risk tolerance? The “Beckys” and “Karens” of suburbia are tired and pissed and are going to vote for anyone who promises to end these pain in the butt policies. [/quote]
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