Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Our daycare is sending anyone with symptoms of anything home and requiring kids not return until they are symptom free. It sucks but I'm glad.
If it's allergies, then you should be able to get a doctor's note. Easy peasy.
I feel like by these standards, my snotty toddler will be excluded more often than not. At that point, why bother? More trouble than it’s worth.
Anonymous wrote:Our daycare is sending anyone with symptoms of anything home and requiring kids not return until they are symptom free. It sucks but I'm glad.
If it's allergies, then you should be able to get a doctor's note. Easy peasy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So children with just a clear runny nose - no other symptoms can come to childcare in Maryland?
That is my understanding. They must have two symptoms to be excluded. So clear runny nose and sneezing gets you excluded but just a clear runny nose does not.
I would hope that's not a real-world example. I would hope daycare providers would not count a runny nose and sneezing as two separate symptoms for these purposes. Use some common sense people.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So children with just a clear runny nose - no other symptoms can come to childcare in Maryland?
That is my understanding. They must have two symptoms to be excluded. So clear runny nose and sneezing gets you excluded but just a clear runny nose does not.
Anonymous wrote:So children with just a clear runny nose - no other symptoms can come to childcare in Maryland?
Anonymous wrote:Colds are tricky, since some are also caused by coronaviruses, same as COVID-19.
Anonymous wrote:How are you dealing with colds/allergies in the times of corona? Cold and allergies have the same symptoms as corona. Runny nose, sneezing, coughing. How are you choosing to exclude kids? Are you simply excluding based on the symptoms? Do you have to have a doctor note to return? Are you requiring a Covid test? I know a lot of this is decided by the state but are you using any judgment or simply going by the regulations that they set?
Anonymous wrote:Well, temperature check for one thing. You seldom don't get fevers (even low grade ones) with allergies.
Snotty noses that are clear are usually just allergies.
Start your kid now with Claritan, Zyrtek, or your choice of OTC b/c they usually take about 2 weeks to kick-in and alleviate/eliminate the symptoms.
As for a common cold: you have a fever STAY HOME if it's not covid. That should be a given (even before this pandemic).
You can get a rapid covid test to prove your kid is covid-free and it's just a cold.