Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Two other discussions of this wasn’t enough for you OP? We get it, you want schools shut down again.
Weird that people can't deal with reports of actual cases and when someone bring up reality they just accuse them of wanting to shut down schools.
Actually I do not want school shut down which is why I'd like to know what's being done at WHS.
Denial and refusal to take action could shut school down though.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So? It’s a huge school. These numbers actually sound pretty good to me
Really? Then you are truly a Covid denier. 26 cases in 2 weeks at one school is not good.
This is far more than any other APS school.
Omg enough with the Covid denier bs. If no one is debilitatingly sick, hospitalized or dead, then 26 cases are merely a blip on the radar. Cases are going to happen. Covid is here to stay. Deal with it and stop screaming that the sky is falling.
You can't even engage in a discussion about cases at a school with screaming. That's really sad. We need to acknowledge reality and figure out how to deal with it.
Reality is COVID is here to stay and kids are going to get it. Vaccinated kids will be asymptomatic or have mild to moderate symptoms--no more sick than other illnesses like strep, the flu or a cold. Unvaccinated kids might have poorer results but that's on their parents. The goal was never to eradicate COVID from schools. We haven't eradicated colds, the flu, strep, rsv..., so expecting no COVID cases in school is ridiculous. In any given two week period during flu and cold season there will be 26 sick kids from any given school. You need to learn that COVID is going to be added to the list of endemic illnesses and stop overreacting.
No one is overreacting. But it would be good to know why it is happening so diffidently compared to other schools.
Great point.
Maybe better contact tracing and testing of a highly vaccinated group makes it appear like a big outbreak.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So? It’s a huge school. These numbers actually sound pretty good to me
Really? Then you are truly a Covid denier. 26 cases in 2 weeks at one school is not good.
This is far more than any other APS school.
Omg enough with the Covid denier bs. If no one is debilitatingly sick, hospitalized or dead, then 26 cases are merely a blip on the radar. Cases are going to happen. Covid is here to stay. Deal with it and stop screaming that the sky is falling.
You can't even engage in a discussion about cases at a school with screaming. That's really sad. We need to acknowledge reality and figure out how to deal with it.
Reality is COVID is here to stay and kids are going to get it. Vaccinated kids will be asymptomatic or have mild to moderate symptoms--no more sick than other illnesses like strep, the flu or a cold. Unvaccinated kids might have poorer results but that's on their parents. The goal was never to eradicate COVID from schools. We haven't eradicated colds, the flu, strep, rsv..., so expecting no COVID cases in school is ridiculous. In any given two week period during flu and cold season there will be 26 sick kids from any given school. You need to learn that COVID is going to be added to the list of endemic illnesses and stop overreacting.
No one is overreacting. But it would be good to know why it is happening so diffidently compared to other schools.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So? It’s a huge school. These numbers actually sound pretty good to me
Really? Then you are truly a Covid denier. 26 cases in 2 weeks at one school is not good.
This is far more than any other APS school.
Omg enough with the Covid denier bs. If no one is debilitatingly sick, hospitalized or dead, then 26 cases are merely a blip on the radar. Cases are going to happen. Covid is here to stay. Deal with it and stop screaming that the sky is falling.
You can't even engage in a discussion about cases at a school with screaming. That's really sad. We need to acknowledge reality and figure out how to deal with it.
Reality is COVID is here to stay and kids are going to get it. Vaccinated kids will be asymptomatic or have mild to moderate symptoms--no more sick than other illnesses like strep, the flu or a cold. Unvaccinated kids might have poorer results but that's on their parents. The goal was never to eradicate COVID from schools. We haven't eradicated colds, the flu, strep, rsv..., so expecting no COVID cases in school is ridiculous. In any given two week period during flu and cold season there will be 26 sick kids from any given school. You need to learn that COVID is going to be added to the list of endemic illnesses and stop overreacting.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So? It’s a huge school. These numbers actually sound pretty good to me
Really? Then you are truly a Covid denier. 26 cases in 2 weeks at one school is not good.
This is far more than any other APS school.
Omg enough with the Covid denier bs. If no one is debilitatingly sick, hospitalized or dead, then 26 cases are merely a blip on the radar. Cases are going to happen. Covid is here to stay. Deal with it and stop screaming that the sky is falling.
You can't even engage in a discussion about cases at a school with screaming. That's really sad. We need to acknowledge reality and figure out how to deal with it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m curious to know if they were vaccinated and/or asymptomatic
A lot of the student cases were in athletes. Aren't they required to be vaccinated?
.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So? It’s a huge school. These numbers actually sound pretty good to me
That's a huge number for the population and far more than the community background case rate. It's not even close/debatable. The Wakefield case rate is 20+ cases for a population of 2200. For a county with 230,000 (over 100x the pop of Wakefield), that would be the equivalent of having 2000+ cases over the same period (100X Wakefield's 20+ cases). Arlington has very little transmission. There have been a bit more than 350 positive cases in the entire county in the last couple week. Probably not a big deal for Wakefield because COVID doesn't affect this population much. No reason to get alarmed. But the math is that Wakefield has a case rate far higher than Arlington as a whole.
Thanks for the math.
WHS is by far the most diverse HS with populations harder hit by the virus.
Wakefield isn’t particularly diverse. Last I saw it was majority Hispanic?
Yorktown was the school that most closely matched Arlington’s demographics, as I recall. But it’s been a few years since I looked at the demographics.
Anonymous wrote:I heard it started on the football team. Can anyone confirm?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So? It’s a huge school. These numbers actually sound pretty good to me
That's a huge number for the population and far more than the community background case rate. It's not even close/debatable. The Wakefield case rate is 20+ cases for a population of 2200. For a county with 230,000 (over 100x the pop of Wakefield), that would be the equivalent of having 2000+ cases over the same period (100X Wakefield's 20+ cases). Arlington has very little transmission. There have been a bit more than 350 positive cases in the entire county in the last couple week. Probably not a big deal for Wakefield because COVID doesn't affect this population much. No reason to get alarmed. But the math is that Wakefield has a case rate far higher than Arlington as a whole.
Thanks for the math.
WHS is by far the most diverse HS with populations harder hit by the virus.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Two other discussions of this wasn’t enough for you OP? We get it, you want schools shut down again.
Weird that people can't deal with reports of actual cases and when someone bring up reality they just accuse them of wanting to shut down schools.
Actually I do not want school shut down which is why [/b]I'd like to know what's being done at WHS.[b]
Denial and refusal to take action could shut school down though.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So? It’s a huge school. These numbers actually sound pretty good to me
Really? Then you are truly a Covid denier. 26 cases in 2 weeks at one school is not good.
This is far more than any other APS school.
Omg enough with the Covid denier bs. If no one is debilitatingly sick, hospitalized or dead, then 26 cases are merely a blip on the radar. Cases are going to happen. Covid is here to stay. Deal with it and stop screaming that the sky is falling.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So? It’s a huge school. These numbers actually sound pretty good to me
That's a huge number for the population and far more than the community background case rate. It's not even close/debatable. The Wakefield case rate is 20+ cases for a population of 2200. For a county with 230,000 (over 100x the pop of Wakefield), that would be the equivalent of having 2000+ cases over the same period (100X Wakefield's 20+ cases). Arlington has very little transmission. There have been a bit more than 350 positive cases in the entire county in the last couple week. Probably not a big deal for Wakefield because COVID doesn't affect this population much. No reason to get alarmed. But the math is that Wakefield has a case rate far higher than Arlington as a whole.
Anonymous wrote:So? It’s a huge school. These numbers actually sound pretty good to me