Anonymous wrote:My kid starts Tuesday. I have no idea if her roommate is vaccinated. I don’t care. DD is. College has me worried about a lot of things but this is not one of them. I’m sure she will be exposed to someone with covid eventually.
Anonymous wrote:If your kid is vaccinated, and the vaccines work, then who cares?
Anonymous wrote:If your kid is vaccinated, and the vaccines work, then who cares?
Anonymous wrote:"If they are not, would you request a room switch?"
Yes. 7% is not a small number, and I think speaking up would put pressure on the university to take exemptions much more seriously. Some are clearly BS-ing their way out of getting vaccinated.
Anonymous wrote:Why don't you pre-empt that ask for your DC to be paired with a vaccinated roommate?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Our child is about to head off to college in a covid hotspot. The school is requiring masks indoors but not in their personal dorm room. A smallish percentage of freshman (7%) have applied for and received an exemption from being vaxed, according to latest communication from school.
Of course we are concerned that our DC could end up with an unvaxed roommate. Would you encourage your child to ask the roommate if they are vaxed? If they are not, would you request a room switch?
I would absolutely want to know if my roommate were vaccinated. why would a college put vaxxed and unvaxxed together? I would think they would put vaxxed with vaxxd and unvaxed with unvaxxed.
Anonymous wrote:Our child is about to head off to college in a covid hotspot. The school is requiring masks indoors but not in their personal dorm room. A smallish percentage of freshman (7%) have applied for and received an exemption from being vaxed, according to latest communication from school.
Of course we are concerned that our DC could end up with an unvaxed roommate. Would you encourage your child to ask the roommate if they are vaxed? If they are not, would you request a room switch?