Anonymous wrote:Sounds pretty low-risk.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sounds pretty low-risk.
Are you kidding me? That’s a shit-ton.
On what planet is 0.08% a shit ton of anything?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sounds pretty low-risk.
Are you kidding me? That’s a shit-ton.
On what planet is 0.08% a shit ton of anything?
On a planet where the R-number exceeds 1. Put that many positive kids in a school building and it will. Quickly.
The R(0) in D.C. right now is below 1.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sounds pretty low-risk.
Are you kidding me? That’s a shit-ton.
On what planet is 0.08% a shit ton of anything?
On a planet where the R-number exceeds 1. Put that many positive kids in a school building and it will. Quickly.
The R(0) in D.C. right now is below 1.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sounds pretty low-risk.
Yep...but likely they'd infect others before being diagnosed.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sounds pretty low-risk.
Are you kidding me? That’s a shit-ton.
On what planet is 0.08% a shit ton of anything?
On a planet where the R-number exceeds 1. Put that many positive kids in a school building and it will. Quickly.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sounds pretty low-risk.
Are you kidding me? That’s a shit-ton.
On what planet is 0.08% a shit ton of anything?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why does everyone assume a masked kid who is infected will infect other kids or teachers who are also masked and presumably, socially-distanced? This is far from a given.
Good probability they will infect other kids or teacher esp if 10 years or older. In addition, the greatest risk of infection is to other family members, kids bringing it home. That is what I read somewhere was the highest percentage of transmission of infection in China
Not really. Researchers say with face masks, the chance of infection or transmission is only 3%. Without masks it rises to 17%--still far from a sure thing.
https://www.livescience.com/face-masks-eye-protection-covid-19-prevention.html
Let's assume at a school like Wilson each kid comes in contact with 100 people each day. So a 3% transmission rate means one infected kid infects three other people. If they start with a 0.8% infection rate that's 16 kids on the first day. Then they infect 48 more and that's 64. Then those 64 infect 192 more and it's 256. If they don't shut the school it doesn't take long before everyone in the school has it.
Get a grip. No way does a kid have potential disease-spreading contact with 100 different kids at school at a time when schools are implementing all sorts of special practices and procedures to limit the spread of COVID.
Ok, pick your number. The outcome doesn't change.
If you truly think there’s no difference between an infected kid having contact with 100 other kids and a kid having contact with 5 other kids then perhaps you’re the one who needs to go back to school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why does everyone assume a masked kid who is infected will infect other kids or teachers who are also masked and presumably, socially-distanced? This is far from a given.
Good probability they will infect other kids or teacher esp if 10 years or older. In addition, the greatest risk of infection is to other family members, kids bringing it home. That is what I read somewhere was the highest percentage of transmission of infection in China
Not really. Researchers say with face masks, the chance of infection or transmission is only 3%. Without masks it rises to 17%--still far from a sure thing.
https://www.livescience.com/face-masks-eye-protection-covid-19-prevention.html
Let's assume at a school like Wilson each kid comes in contact with 100 people each day. So a 3% transmission rate means one infected kid infects three other people. If they start with a 0.8% infection rate that's 16 kids on the first day. Then they infect 48 more and that's 64. Then those 64 infect 192 more and it's 256. If they don't shut the school it doesn't take long before everyone in the school has it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why does everyone assume a masked kid who is infected will infect other kids or teachers who are also masked and presumably, socially-distanced? This is far from a given.
Good probability they will infect other kids or teacher esp if 10 years or older. In addition, the greatest risk of infection is to other family members, kids bringing it home. That is what I read somewhere was the highest percentage of transmission of infection in China
Not really. Researchers say with face masks, the chance of infection or transmission is only 3%. Without masks it rises to 17%--still far from a sure thing.
https://www.livescience.com/face-masks-eye-protection-covid-19-prevention.html
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why does everyone assume a masked kid who is infected will infect other kids or teachers who are also masked and presumably, socially-distanced? This is far from a given.
Good probability they will infect other kids or teacher esp if 10 years or older. In addition, the greatest risk of infection is to other family members, kids bringing it home. That is what I read somewhere was the highest percentage of transmission of infection in China
Not really. Researchers say with face masks, the chance of infection or transmission is only 3%. Without masks it rises to 17%--still far from a sure thing.
https://www.livescience.com/face-masks-eye-protection-covid-19-prevention.html
Let's assume at a school like Wilson each kid comes in contact with 100 people each day. So a 3% transmission rate means one infected kid infects three other people. If they start with a 0.8% infection rate that's 16 kids on the first day. Then they infect 48 more and that's 64. Then those 64 infect 192 more and it's 256. If they don't shut the school it doesn't take long before everyone in the school has it.
Get a grip. No way does a kid have potential disease-spreading contact with 100 different kids at school at a time when schools are implementing all sorts of special practices and procedures to limit the spread of COVID.
Ok, pick your number. The outcome doesn't change.
If you truly think there’s no difference between an infected kid having contact with 100 other kids and a kid having contact with 5 other kids then perhaps you’re the one who needs to go back to school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why does everyone assume a masked kid who is infected will infect other kids or teachers who are also masked and presumably, socially-distanced? This is far from a given.
Good probability they will infect other kids or teacher esp if 10 years or older. In addition, the greatest risk of infection is to other family members, kids bringing it home. That is what I read somewhere was the highest percentage of transmission of infection in China
Not really. Researchers say with face masks, the chance of infection or transmission is only 3%. Without masks it rises to 17%--still far from a sure thing.
https://www.livescience.com/face-masks-eye-protection-covid-19-prevention.html
Let's assume at a school like Wilson each kid comes in contact with 100 people each day. So a 3% transmission rate means one infected kid infects three other people. If they start with a 0.8% infection rate that's 16 kids on the first day. Then they infect 48 more and that's 64. Then those 64 infect 192 more and it's 256. If they don't shut the school it doesn't take long before everyone in the school has it.
Get a grip. No way does a kid have potential disease-spreading contact with 100 different kids at school at a time when schools are implementing all sorts of special practices and procedures to limit the spread of COVID.
Ok, pick your number. The outcome doesn't change.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sounds pretty low-risk.
Yep...but likely they'd infect others before being diagnosed.
Eh, not likely if everyone is masked.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why does everyone assume a masked kid who is infected will infect other kids or teachers who are also masked and presumably, socially-distanced? This is far from a given.
Good probability they will infect other kids or teacher esp if 10 years or older. In addition, the greatest risk of infection is to other family members, kids bringing it home. That is what I read somewhere was the highest percentage of transmission of infection in China
Not really. Researchers say with face masks, the chance of infection or transmission is only 3%. Without masks it rises to 17%--still far from a sure thing.
https://www.livescience.com/face-masks-eye-protection-covid-19-prevention.html
Let's assume at a school like Wilson each kid comes in contact with 100 people each day. So a 3% transmission rate means one infected kid infects three other people. If they start with a 0.8% infection rate that's 16 kids on the first day. Then they infect 48 more and that's 64. Then those 64 infect 192 more and it's 256. If they don't shut the school it doesn't take long before everyone in the school has it.
Get a grip. No way does a kid have potential disease-spreading contact with 100 different kids at school at a time when schools are implementing all sorts of special practices and procedures to limit the spread of COVID.