Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would not and I would not wear a mask myself either. If you are inviting this person into your home each day you just have to acknowledge that you are slightly increasing the risk for your kids and yourself and your nanny.
I do agree with the other posters, that if you require your nanny to wear a mask in your house, your should also be wearing a mask in your house 100% of the time that she is there and you should have your kids wear a mask also. I think it is unfair for you to require your nanny to do something that you would not do yourself.
OP here. I don't agree. My house, my money, my rules. How is it unfair to make that part of the contract?
Anonymous wrote:I would not and I would not wear a mask myself either. If you are inviting this person into your home each day you just have to acknowledge that you are slightly increasing the risk for your kids and yourself and your nanny.
I do agree with the other posters, that if you require your nanny to wear a mask in your house, your should also be wearing a mask in your house 100% of the time that she is there and you should have your kids wear a mask also. I think it is unfair for you to require your nanny to do something that you would not do yourself.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Mine is non masked. I don’t see the risk our teacher is relatively young and we are young as well
The fact that you're young makes it MORE likely that you're infected but asymptomatic, and therefore more likely to be a silent carrier. And just because you don't end up in the hospital or die from it doesn't mean you won't have serious issues in the longer term.
There's a 27yo pitcher for the Red Sox—clearly someone young and in excellent health—who hasn't been able to start the season because of inflammation around his heart after a bout of COVID earlier in the month. Doctors are seeing more and more instances like this during the current wave, in young and otherwise healthy people, where the effects linger long after the active infection has cleared.
The statistics are shifting, and it's become increasingly clear that "we're young" is NOT enough to base decisions like this on. (Not saying you're wrong, just that you're using the wrong criteria to get there.) Younger, healthier people can still get it, transmit it, and have serious issues from it. Please don't continue to spread the myth that only older people or unhealthy people get really sick from COVID.
Anonymous wrote:Mine is non masked. I don’t see the risk our teacher is relatively young and we are young as well
Anonymous wrote:We do not but we shoot temps of everyone entering the home (including temps of family each day).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Mine isn’t . I’m not afraid of catching Covid
Are you interested in teaching, by chance?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Mine isn’t . I’m not afraid of catching Covid
see you in the ICU
Strange comment. NP here and my DH tested positive and I slept in the bed with him. Nobody else in our house had symptoms nor did we bother to get tested.
The only reason he even got tested is because he is a doctor working at the hospital and it is mandatory.
People are not going to the ICU, or even the hospital who don't have major underlying conditions. He has seen a few people under 65 who have been very ill and those were morbidly obese people with severe heart complications. One patient tipped the scales at over 450lbs and did pass.
“ People are not going to the ICU, or even the hospital who don't have major underlying conditions.”
My god you are naive and it’s scary to think your husband is a doctor. This statement is patently false.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We do not but we shoot temps of everyone entering the home (including temps of family each day).
This is 100% for show. Don’t even bother.
Precisely. Meaningless Pandemic Theatre.