Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do people understand how almost impossible it is for a child to get Covid and for the adults in their household not to get it? This is how Covid spreads. If you're kid has it, you either have it or just had it. Just get yourself tested. We go to the testing place a couple blocks away whenever we are in doubt. I'm not going to subject my kid to that for every random runny nose or sneeze because even though the test itself is no big deal, getting one is a whole production and it's genuinely hard to do with a small child. I can easily wait 15 minutes and then get tested by someone in full PPE -- my 3 yr old would throw a fit at that entire outing and everyone would be miserable.
We do not need to be testing small children constantly.
My 14 month old had it and nobody else got it...
Yeah, I know several kids who have had it without positive tests from parents. Not common, but not even remotely almost impossible. Also, try a different testing site if yours is hard with kids. Mine (2 and 4) actually look forward to getting tested at our pediatricians. They say it tickles, and they get lollipops. We're and out in 5 mins. It's so not a big deal for them.
Actually incredibly unlikely. The parents probably had it but didn’t test at a time when they the virus was active. The best way is to figure out when the child was exposed and then test multiple times. And it can vary by person. I know a family where they all got tested the day the learned if the exposure, and mom tested positive but dad was negative. Dad tested again three days later and was positive. They are all in the same house. Just random that the virus took longer to infect him.
My philosophy is test everyone for a known exposure regardless of symptoms. But for something mild like a runny nose that could be a symptom or could be something else? DH and I test and we keep an eye on it. DH and I have been tested over a dozen times (all negative). Kid has never been tested. She also is the least likely source of infection though because DH and I have to be indoors with other people much more frequently than she does.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do people understand how almost impossible it is for a child to get Covid and for the adults in their household not to get it? This is how Covid spreads. If you're kid has it, you either have it or just had it. Just get yourself tested. We go to the testing place a couple blocks away whenever we are in doubt. I'm not going to subject my kid to that for every random runny nose or sneeze because even though the test itself is no big deal, getting one is a whole production and it's genuinely hard to do with a small child. I can easily wait 15 minutes and then get tested by someone in full PPE -- my 3 yr old would throw a fit at that entire outing and everyone would be miserable.
We do not need to be testing small children constantly.
My 14 month old had it and nobody else got it...
Anonymous wrote:If you or your children are doing in-person activities, even if you are masked when doing them, I believe you have a moral obligation to get them tested.
If you are all basically quarantining already, then I don't think it is necessary.
Anonymous wrote:Nope. I gave him a Claritin and he was better in 20 minutes. So allergies. He had never had them before.
Also, we can’t get tested. We would lose our childcare and thus our jobs. Not an exaggeration. DH is a teacher and has been told if he misses one more day he will get fired. I am a litigator and clients have told me the same thing.
That’s the American way! Spreading a deadly virus because even white collar professionals use their sick leave, and plus we can’t master testing!
Anonymous wrote:Ds, 5, developed terrible hacking cough out of nowhere. No other symptoms, no one else in house sick. We didnt suspect covid but didnt want to send him to PreK like that without knowing for sure -- so he got tested, was negative, and that cough is still not entirely gone 2 weeks later.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do people understand how almost impossible it is for a child to get Covid and for the adults in their household not to get it? This is how Covid spreads. If you're kid has it, you either have it or just had it. Just get yourself tested. We go to the testing place a couple blocks away whenever we are in doubt. I'm not going to subject my kid to that for every random runny nose or sneeze because even though the test itself is no big deal, getting one is a whole production and it's genuinely hard to do with a small child. I can easily wait 15 minutes and then get tested by someone in full PPE -- my 3 yr old would throw a fit at that entire outing and everyone would be miserable.
We do not need to be testing small children constantly.
My 14 month old had it and nobody else got it...
Yeah, I know several kids who have had it without positive tests from parents. Not common, but not even remotely almost impossible. Also, try a different testing site if yours is hard with kids. Mine (2 and 4) actually look forward to getting tested at our pediatricians. They say it tickles, and they get lollipops. We're and out in 5 mins. It's so not a big deal for them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do people understand how almost impossible it is for a child to get Covid and for the adults in their household not to get it? This is how Covid spreads. If you're kid has it, you either have it or just had it. Just get yourself tested. We go to the testing place a couple blocks away whenever we are in doubt. I'm not going to subject my kid to that for every random runny nose or sneeze because even though the test itself is no big deal, getting one is a whole production and it's genuinely hard to do with a small child. I can easily wait 15 minutes and then get tested by someone in full PPE -- my 3 yr old would throw a fit at that entire outing and everyone would be miserable.
We do not need to be testing small children constantly.
My 14 month old had it and nobody else got it...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
if you know your child has allergies, it’s allergy season, and their symptoms are exactly the same as previous years - ok. But if your kid suddenly wakes up with a runny nose and congestion- you need to suspect covid.
+1,000. If you and your husband telework, and your kids are home and none of you are engaging anyone outside of your household, fine don't get tested. Otherwise please for the sake of public health test. You shouldn't test for another five days so in the meantime if your family is out and about waiting to see if they had covid and gave it to you you're potentially spreading to others.
I work in Covid contact tracing and have lost count of the number of people who said "I figured it was just allergies" and tested positive.