Anonymous wrote:OP here. I wasn't trying to whine about having to do the telehealth appointment or take my son to get tested. I was trying to use a real life situation to show how that this isn't easy. Excluding kids from school raises equity issues. Kids from lower income families are less likely to have parents available to take them for testing and therefore, to get them back into school if the test is positive. Students with asthma may wind up being excluded more than non-asthmatic students, which create an equity issue. These issues have to be considered. Lower income families have less sick leave and are therefore more likely to send their kids to school if they are sick.
I think the rules would have to be written so that no one with any of the symptoms, including just a cough, is permitted to come to school. It has to be very clear. If you have ANY of these symptoms, stay home.
All of this makes me so sad.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. I wasn't trying to whine about having to do the telehealth appointment or take my son to get tested. I was trying to use a real life situation to show how that this isn't easy. Excluding kids from school raises equity issues. Kids from lower income families are less likely to have parents available to take them for testing and therefore, to get them back into school if the test is positive. Students with asthma may wind up being excluded more than non-asthmatic students, which create an equity issue. These issues have to be considered. Lower income families have less sick leave and are therefore more likely to send their kids to school if they are sick.
I think the rules would have to be written so that no one with any of the symptoms, including just a cough, is permitted to come to school. It has to be very clear. If you have ANY of these symptoms, stay home.
All of this makes me so sad.
Anonymous wrote:Your kid stays home so that you don’t end up in a scenario where schools have to fully shutdown because your kid brought in the virus. Safe rather than sorry.
Sorry it’s an inconvenience. The whole virus is for everyone.
In my scenario, when do you call the doctor or go to urgent care? The first day he coughs? When there is a mild sore throat? There has been no fever at any time. He is just mildly ill. What would you do under these circumstances during the school year? When do you stay home? Is fever the determining factor? Are all kids with coughs excluded from school? Is the burden on the family to get a test for a mildly ill child before he can return to school? The more people you have making these decisions the more people are going to send sick kids to school.
Under normal circumstances, this wouldn't warrant a call to a doctor, let alone a visit. If you have to isolate for even mild illness, how can a kid get an education? If there is are parallel online academic offerings (in person and online), will the online offerings be with a student's actual teachers? How might this work?