Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:And this is how a new, deadlier variant happens
Or it’s how Covid eventually turns into the weakened common cold, like other coronaviruses.
Since we don’t know which of these two outcomes is the more likely, perhaps better to err on the side of caution, hmm?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:And this is how a new, deadlier variant happens
Or it’s how Covid eventually turns into the weakened common cold, like other coronaviruses.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:He does not need to go to urgent care!! That’s so selfish. It just means he will spread COVID to everyone there and unless he’s immunocompromised, he’s not going to qualify for any treatments.
If for some reason he needs an extra test, tell him to go thru a cvs drive thru or do a labcorp pixel thru the mail
Calm down. It is not selfish. Home tests don’t work and I wouldn’t trust cvs. Same as home.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My son is at a big 10. Lots of posts on parents page about kids turning pos. They isolate you in a special dorm room if they can unless you live less than 4 hours away you have to go home. You are isolated for 5 days. Last week the dorm filled up and parents are now paying for hotels out of pocket.
If my son felt sick I would tell him not to test. Missing a week of classes is a lot and we all already had delta and omnicrom.
I think schools need to stop this nonsense with isolation. Ever since Delta passed its been like the flu. It was more like a cold with Omnicron for us.
You’re so damn pathetic. He should be expelled.
At this point we need to end testing and end any isolation.
Why?
Because it is meaningless. So many do not. The value in doing this for others at a macro level does not exist anymore.
Anonymous wrote:I convinced my freshman to take a test today after he said he was exhausted all week with an upset stomach. It’s positive. He’s going to urgent care now to confirm and get documentation. Student health center is closed over the weekend.
The parent group FB page has several posts about positive cases.
This is a huge university where nobody masks. He’s been at countless parties, bars, etc. all week. Plus classes.
The school website basically says: report it to the health center, stay in your room or mask if you must go out, tell your teachers. It also says teachers aren’t responsible for helping; they have discretion even with documentation.
Given that my kid was sick this last week and going to class since he didn’t know he had covid, I bet he will feel better by Monday or Tuesday. There’s nothing preventing him from going to class. He started feeling sick on Wednesday.
Urgent care is filled with students btw.
Anonymous wrote:And this is how a new, deadlier variant happens
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My son is at a big 10. Lots of posts on parents page about kids turning pos. They isolate you in a special dorm room if they can unless you live less than 4 hours away you have to go home. You are isolated for 5 days. Last week the dorm filled up and parents are now paying for hotels out of pocket.
If my son felt sick I would tell him not to test. Missing a week of classes is a lot and we all already had delta and omnicrom.
I think schools need to stop this nonsense with isolation. Ever since Delta passed its been like the flu. It was more like a cold with Omnicron for us.
You’re so damn pathetic. He should be expelled.
At this point we need to end testing and end any isolation.
Anonymous wrote:My freshman’s school has no isolation dorm and no virtual class options, and positive kids are told to go home if they’re in a dorm. I heard kids who bothered to test went home on Amtrak. Most kids realize it’s a don’t ask don’t tell type policy.
Anonymous wrote:I convinced my freshman to take a test today after he said he was exhausted all week with an upset stomach. It’s positive. He’s going to urgent care now to confirm and get documentation. Student health center is closed over the weekend.
The parent group FB page has several posts about positive cases.
This is a huge university where nobody masks. He’s been at countless parties, bars, etc. all week. Plus classes.
The school website basically says: report it to the health center, stay in your room or mask if you must go out, tell your teachers. It also says teachers aren’t responsible for helping; they have discretion even with documentation.
Given that my kid was sick this last week and going to class since he didn’t know he had covid, I bet he will feel better by Monday or Tuesday. There’s nothing preventing him from going to class. He started feeling sick on Wednesday.
Urgent care is filled with students btw.