Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is op. I know kid get covid is more slim, but I am more worried about my kid catching covid ( with no symptom) and then transmit to my high risk DH and grandparents that are not got the chance to be vaccinated yet. I will loose up my playground rule once adults are vaccinated.
I'm sort of surprised you're still visiting with grandparents if you're that nervous about COVID. Are unmasked children on playgrounds really your biggest source of exposure to COVID?
I'm the pp with the ASD child. I understand the concern about transmissions. My kids have a couple particularly high-risk grandparents, and my spouse is immunosuppressed. But my spouse is also a healthcare worker who was going in throughout the pandemic. And our kids were going to daycare and therapy. So playgrounds ultimately only accounted for a small part of our exposure. And accordingly, they wouldn't have been seeing their grandparents at all.
Anonymous wrote:Too strict. He is more scarred by lack of interaction and normalcy at this point than by playing next to an unmasked kid. Stop making your kid anxious!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You get to make your own risk decisions for your own kids. I don't know your situation- perhaps you or another family member is high-risk and unvaccinated, in which case extra caution is sensible.
My son is one of those unmasked kids at the playground. He has ASD and simply won't tolerate masks- and yes, we and his therapists have been working on it daily. We're not keeping him away from parks and playgrounds indefinitely.
Obviously not, if he’s already one of “those unmasked kids at the playground.”
Anonymous wrote:This is op. I know kid get covid is more slim, but I am more worried about my kid catching covid ( with no symptom) and then transmit to my high risk DH and grandparents that are not got the chance to be vaccinated yet. I will loose up my playground rule once adults are vaccinated.
Anonymous wrote:You get to make your own risk decisions for your own kids. I don't know your situation- perhaps you or another family member is high-risk and unvaccinated, in which case extra caution is sensible.
My son is one of those unmasked kids at the playground. He has ASD and simply won't tolerate masks- and yes, we and his therapists have been working on it daily. We're not keeping him away from parks and playgrounds indefinitely.
Anonymous wrote:I think being masked outside even if other kids are not is probably a lot safer than grabbing a donut from Dunkin’ donuts
Anonymous wrote:This is op. I know kid get covid is more slim, but I am more worried about my kid catching covid ( with no symptom) and then transmit to my high risk DH and grandparents that are not got the chance to be vaccinated yet. I will loose up my playground rule once adults are vaccinated.
Anonymous wrote:This is op. I know kid get covid is more slim, but I am more worried about my kid catching covid ( with no symptom) and then transmit to my high risk DH and grandparents that are not got the chance to be vaccinated yet. I will loose up my playground rule once adults are vaccinated.