Anonymous wrote:For those that have healthy kids and don't want them returning to exposure in normal classroom setting, what do you believe is their actual risk of fatality or MIS-C?
1 in 1000? 1 in 100,000? 1 in 10,000,000? Do you know? How do you make major life decisions without dispassionately evaluating that risk?
Anonymous wrote:For those that have healthy kids and don't want them returning to exposure in normal classroom setting, what do you believe is their actual risk of fatality or MIS-C?
1 in 1000? 1 in 100,000? 1 in 10,000,000? Do you know? How do you make major life decisions without dispassionately evaluating that risk?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For those that have healthy kids and don't want them returning to exposure in normal classroom setting, what do you believe is their actual risk of fatality or MIS-C?
1 in 1000? 1 in 100,000? 1 in 10,000,000? Do you know? How do you make major life decisions without dispassionately evaluating that risk?
I'm a teacher and parent. I'm not particularly concerned my child will get sick but I am worried about myself.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No we won’t be sending our kids to school. Too many crazies taking too many risks and then send their infected kids to school. Do you even know how many parents send sick kids to school during a regular year? They dose them up n Tylenol and send them in. It’s ridiculous. We will manage our schedules somehow to ensure that they stay home until it’s safe.
This x 1000
Ask any school clinic aide or nurse how many times kids come in to see them with fevers, 4+ hours after the start of the school day. Ask me how I know.
People need to work so they need to send their kids to school so they will try to hide any fever with Tylenol. Oldest trick in the book but one that can be deadly to so many now.
Yep.
Anonymous wrote:For those that have healthy kids and don't want them returning to exposure in normal classroom setting, what do you believe is their actual risk of fatality or MIS-C?
1 in 1000? 1 in 100,000? 1 in 10,000,000? Do you know? How do you make major life decisions without dispassionately evaluating that risk?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No we won’t be sending our kids to school. Too many crazies taking too many risks and then send their infected kids to school. Do you even know how many parents send sick kids to school during a regular year? They dose them up n Tylenol and send them in. It’s ridiculous. We will manage our schedules somehow to ensure that they stay home until it’s safe.
This x 1000
Ask any school clinic aide or nurse how many times kids come in to see them with fevers, 4+ hours after the start of the school day. Ask me how I know.
People need to work so they need to send their kids to school so they will try to hide any fever with Tylenol. Oldest trick in the book but one that can be deadly to so many now.
Anonymous wrote:No we won’t be sending our kids to school. Too many crazies taking too many risks and then send their infected kids to school. Do you even know how many parents send sick kids to school during a regular year? They dose them up n Tylenol and send them in. It’s ridiculous. We will manage our schedules somehow to ensure that they stay home until it’s safe.
Anonymous wrote:If cases are way down by then I would let him go as normal. But if local cases start to rise or there are outbreaks at nearby schools, I'd probably pull him until things died down. Though I'd guess the schools would close at that point anyway. If conditions are the same as they are right now, I probably would not send. There is still a lot of community transmission throughout this area and enclosed indoor spaces seem to be breeding grounds.
Anonymous wrote:Yes, DD is going into K. My decision is data driven. 9 kids in the entire US have died of covid. That is 0.02 percent of the diagnosed cases in children 0-18. The flu kills 600-800 kids a year. I am curiuos and concerned as to how they will clean her school. I am also concerned that parents won't be vigilant in keeping sick kids home. That is out of my control, but I will always do my part and not send a sick kid to school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes, assuming school will be some semblance of normal & kids will actually get recess. Otherwise, we might just homeschool.
+1 The social interactions are key to my child’s development. The academic stuff is easy to homeschool in a couple of hours a day max. We may be looking into homeschool coops.