Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes, I am worried. But my kid needs to be in school. I feel confident her teachers are vaccinated. I don’t know about the families of her classmates. We have good quality masks. We will test family members periodically (DC’s test yourself program is great for this) to do our part. I can only hope for the best. There is not much point in sitting around and stressing about it. I’ll pay attention to the news snd the Covid numbers snd make the best choices I can.
Testing yourself periodically with no symptoms makes the DC positivity rate seem lower than it is.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes, I am worried. But my kid needs to be in school. I feel confident her teachers are vaccinated. I don’t know about the families of her classmates. We have good quality masks. We will test family members periodically (DC’s test yourself program is great for this) to do our part. I can only hope for the best. There is not much point in sitting around and stressing about it. I’ll pay attention to the news snd the Covid numbers snd make the best choices I can.
Testing yourself periodically with no symptoms makes the DC positivity rate seem lower than it is.
Anonymous wrote:Modeling (based on DC’s use of masks, HVAC upgrades and testing of up to 10% of kids each weeks) shows that more than 50% of kids will get COVID in the first 90 days of school.
So if you care about your kids getting COVID, it’s appropriate to be nervous.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Modeling (based on DC’s use of masks, HVAC upgrades and testing of up to 10% of kids each weeks) shows that more than 50% of kids will get COVID in the first 90 days of school.
So if you care about your kids getting COVID, it’s appropriate to be nervous.
Totally agree. There are real things to be nervous about. I think there are a lot of other nervous parents out there, based on the questions that I heard on our schools’ back to school calls. Here we are controlling as much as we can. KN95s for the kids and frequent testing so that if we do have a case we catch it early. We also will not hesitate to keep our kids at home if there is a case in the classroom even if we are not deemed a “close contact”. Hopefully this will put our odds at below 50 percent. But that is still not a risk that we take lightly. And it is comforting to me to know that there are others in the same boat.
Where can I find that model by the way? I believe it is true based on what we know about the way covid spreads and what communities with IPL saw last year even with a less contagious virus. but would be interested to see it.
Anonymous wrote:Modeling (based on DC’s use of masks, HVAC upgrades and testing of up to 10% of kids each weeks) shows that more than 50% of kids will get COVID in the first 90 days of school.
So if you care about your kids getting COVID, it’s appropriate to be nervous.
Anonymous wrote:Yes, I am worried. But my kid needs to be in school. I feel confident her teachers are vaccinated. I don’t know about the families of her classmates. We have good quality masks. We will test family members periodically (DC’s test yourself program is great for this) to do our part. I can only hope for the best. There is not much point in sitting around and stressing about it. I’ll pay attention to the news snd the Covid numbers snd make the best choices I can.