Anonymous wrote:What county are you in? We’re in Fairfax and apparently the health department this week told a meeting of private school principals they were dropping contact tracing and moving to treating Covid as an “endemic” illness.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don’t understand the cries to drop testing. Measurement is the LAST thing that should be dropped, even after masks, quarantines etc. Otherwise, how will we know how many cases and whether dropping protective measures remains warranted? I want an off-ramp to normalcy too, and I’m optimistic we can drop masks by late spring if we can get more people boosted, but testing seems more the least intrusive and most informative step we take.
No you don’t. You want zero risk and complete guarantee of “safety.” That is never going to happen and this testing madness is an expensive way to pretend that we have control over the spread. Agree with the others; it’s time to drop this pretense.
Anonymous wrote:I don’t understand the cries to drop testing. Measurement is the LAST thing that should be dropped, even after masks, quarantines etc. Otherwise, how will we know how many cases and whether dropping protective measures remains warranted? I want an off-ramp to normalcy too, and I’m optimistic we can drop masks by late spring if we can get more people boosted, but testing seems more the least intrusive and most informative step we take.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am curious about why schools are targeted as the place where so much testing occurs. My children are tested every week. The company charges my insurance $300 every week. The school, until omicron had practically zero cases. It also seems like from school updates, more cases are caught at home than using the asymptomatic testing. I think this is a pretty high cost to test a population that is not at high risk as compared to other populations, like even the adults in my workplace.
+1 It’s all a business! The insurance cos, the PCR makers, the drug manufactures, the stock holders, the wall st traders, the shareholders. They are all laughing all the way to the bank while we cry ourselves to sleep in despair.
Anonymous wrote:I am curious about why schools are targeted as the place where so much testing occurs. My children are tested every week. The company charges my insurance $300 every week. The school, until omicron had practically zero cases. It also seems like from school updates, more cases are caught at home than using the asymptomatic testing. I think this is a pretty high cost to test a population that is not at high risk as compared to other populations, like even the adults in my workplace.
Anonymous wrote:It seems like a bit of whiplash that we went from the return from winter break testing everyone before return to now our school will no longer test vaccinated kids.
Did I miss a briefing on how we jumped from hyper vigilance two weeks ago to now, when we are doing less than we were before winter break?
Anonymous wrote:It seems like a bit of whiplash that we went from the return from winter break testing everyone before return to now our school will no longer test vaccinated kids.
Did I miss a briefing on how we jumped from hyper vigilance two weeks ago to now, when we are doing less than we were before winter break?