Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Has anyone pulled out of your daycare snd looked for a different option because of non Covid related absences? We are concerned daycare might not be worth it because of all the time the child will spend waiting for Covid results before being allowed back. Our center has very strict rules and excludes children for a single symptom, including runny nose or congestion, which could be due to an allergy. I’m sort of wondering after how many absences you just decide it’s not worth it.
Yes we pulled out of a program for this last year. We are dual working parents and one of us has no WFH option -- it was 100% not feasible to escalate to multi-day quarantine for every sniffle. We had a nanny for a while during the remainder of 2020 and then switched to a new daycare after the nanny quit.
Hahahahah so you are back to where you started. That was pretty unproductive. I guess daycare was your best option in the first place.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Has anyone pulled out of your daycare snd looked for a different option because of non Covid related absences? We are concerned daycare might not be worth it because of all the time the child will spend waiting for Covid results before being allowed back. Our center has very strict rules and excludes children for a single symptom, including runny nose or congestion, which could be due to an allergy. I’m sort of wondering after how many absences you just decide it’s not worth it.
Yes we pulled out of a program for this last year. We are dual working parents and one of us has no WFH option -- it was 100% not feasible to escalate to multi-day quarantine for every sniffle. We had a nanny for a while during the remainder of 2020 and then switched to a new daycare after the nanny quit.
Anonymous wrote:We are pulling DD for precisely this reason and stretching to get a nanny. DD gets sick every two weeks and is out for a week minimum. And this was during the spring and summer!!!!! Not even peak cold flu. The germs are nastier after all the lockdowns and she's been pretty sick a couple of times.
It would be easier if she could go back with a negative test, but it's 48 hours without symptoms. And DD has been so miserable with some if these germs I would have kept her out anyway.
I just can't do it anymore and I'm lucky to have the nanny option. Which I never wanted and DD has been in daycare generally since she was 6 months
Anonymous wrote:Has anyone pulled out of your daycare snd looked for a different option because of non Covid related absences? We are concerned daycare might not be worth it because of all the time the child will spend waiting for Covid results before being allowed back. Our center has very strict rules and excludes children for a single symptom, including runny nose or congestion, which could be due to an allergy. I’m sort of wondering after how many absences you just decide it’s not worth it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:They can go back with negative test and “symptoms improving” not sure what that means in practice. Also, the negative test and doctors note has to be cleared by another team not located at the daycare.
Those are the Maryland guidelines for daycares. We have sent DD back with a minor cough after a negative Covid test - I can honestly say her symptoms had "improved" because when her cold started there were streams of green snot flowing from her nose, and when we sent her back she was basically fine except for the occasional cough, maybe some clear snot from her nose.
How long does it take them to clear the negative test/doctor's note? If that means another day just waiting for them to clear it, I would call BS. I think most reasonable daycares know that you use daycare because you need it, not because you can take a week or two off every month.
some
What are your other options?
Anonymous wrote:They can go back with negative test and “symptoms improving” not sure what that means in practice. Also, the negative test and doctors note has to be cleared by another team not located at the daycare.