Anonymous wrote:I’m a nanny who lives alone and walks to work. I am totally isolated from everyone save my charge and his parents and my once weekly trip (during 60+ hour at 6AM) to the grocery store for all of us. My employers are working from home. We have “closed the loop”.
How can they trust me? The same way that I trust them. All of our health hangs in the balance especially the toddlers.
I think the families allow kids from three different families to play together are irresponsible. That’s three exposures to the grocery store (at the very least) as opposed to our one.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So if each family goes to the store it’s like being exposed to the store three times instead of once with kids from different families playing with each other. Plus other interactions that you don’t know about.
And?
Anonymous wrote:So if each family goes to the store it’s like being exposed to the store three times instead of once with kids from different families playing with each other. Plus other interactions that you don’t know about.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We trust our nanny, and she trusts us. We take social distancing very seriously, and trust that she does the same. We are basically acting as one large family unit, working together to cut risk and recognizing we share all combined risk.
FWIW, I don’t think it’s that different from having another family that you share risk with. You find your small tribe, and all commit to staying within the tribe.
+1. Our nanny is still coming (thank heavens) and it's a calculated risk we are all willingly taking, that we believe is very small. I think the example you've shared is another reasonable way to approach the situation, OP. Yes, every contact increases risk, especially since most adults are still venturing out to e.g. grocery shop, even if only rarely. But really tightening our social circles at least decreases the risk measurably.