Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is the dumbest policy in a long line of many. Allergies, asthma, chronic headaches, cold season coming up. It's utter nonsense. Seriously, how stupid can people be and feel like they need to one up the CDC and state officials?
+1 I feel for you ES parents.
my kids are in MS/HS, but DC gets migraines, have had them since 6 yrs old, DC also has asthma. Other DC has terrible allergies, including in the fall.
I have stated before.. MoCo leadership, including the BOE are waaaay too conservative and are driven by fear rather than science.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Apparently the new “guidance” confirms what we’ve been hearing. If a child has “symptoms” associated with COVID (could be a runny nose) their close contacts (this has been interpreted as the entire class in many schools) are quarantined for ten days.
This is completely ludicrous and not based in science or CDC guidelines.
It’s not “symptoms,” it’s symptom! One symptom!
“ This is particularly important as if your child has any of the following single symptoms they will be sent home and not be able to return to school until they have a negative test, alternate diagnosis, or complete a full 10-day quarantine. During that period of time, all other students who have been in their close contact will have to be in a temporary quarantine while the other families wait on the outcome of that testing for your child. This could be potentially disruptive to your children and families moving in and out of quarantine and to avoid it takes all of us working together. It is a collective responsibility that we exercise extreme caution and be conservative in our approach.
The single symptoms that the health room staff screen for and will result in quarantine are cough, difficulty breathing, new loss of taste or smell, fever ≥100.4°, sore throat, severe Headache, diarrhea or vomiting. Please do not send your children to school with any of these symptoms. This is essential for us to continue to remain in school without quarantine.”
What choice do they have, though? I'm in favor of in-person and my kids went back in spring. But what else can they do?
It also doesn't say runny nose, at least, because then no one would be in school from Nov.-March.
What else can they do? They can not quarantine entire classrooms of masked kids based on one sniffle. They could follow the CDC guidelines for a start!
Runny nose and sniffles are not on the list.
"symptoms that the health room staff screen for and will result in quarantine are cough, difficulty breathing, new loss of taste or smell, fever ≥100.4°, sore throat, severe Headache, diarrhea or vomiting"
Still ... cough (allergies, reflux), a sore throat (yelled too much at your sports game or playing with friends), a headache (migraines are a problem for many and it is utter stupidity to quarantine a class based on a headache). Diarrhea also quite common. A kid eats the wrong food or has an irritable bowel, everyone is quarantined.
Parents need to read between the lines and not report things to school unless a kid is actually sick. That's unfortunate, as this system only works with transparency and honesty, but with this utter nonsense, it just creates incentives not to report anything.
Anonymous wrote:
Common allergy symptoms such as sneezing ARE NOT on this list.
Coughing and asthma do need to be clarified, though. My son is asthmatic and coughs during allergy season, even while medicated, and his pediatrician would be very willing to explain his long history of symptoms to MCPS. I expect that such cases will be allowed in school, with documentation.
So please don't worry. Reasonable accommodations will be made.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Apparently the new “guidance” confirms what we’ve been hearing. If a child has “symptoms” associated with COVID (could be a runny nose) their close contacts (this has been interpreted as the entire class in many schools) are quarantined for ten days.
This is completely ludicrous and not based in science or CDC guidelines.
It’s not “symptoms,” it’s symptom! One symptom!
“ This is particularly important as if your child has any of the following single symptoms they will be sent home and not be able to return to school until they have a negative test, alternate diagnosis, or complete a full 10-day quarantine. During that period of time, all other students who have been in their close contact will have to be in a temporary quarantine while the other families wait on the outcome of that testing for your child. This could be potentially disruptive to your children and families moving in and out of quarantine and to avoid it takes all of us working together. It is a collective responsibility that we exercise extreme caution and be conservative in our approach.
The single symptoms that the health room staff screen for and will result in quarantine are cough, difficulty breathing, new loss of taste or smell, fever ≥100.4°, sore throat, severe Headache, diarrhea or vomiting. Please do not send your children to school with any of these symptoms. This is essential for us to continue to remain in school without quarantine.”
What choice do they have, though? I'm in favor of in-person and my kids went back in spring. But what else can they do?
It also doesn't say runny nose, at least, because then no one would be in school from Nov.-March.
What else can they do? They can not quarantine entire classrooms of masked kids based on one sniffle. They could follow the CDC guidelines for a start!
Runny nose and sniffles are not on the list.
"symptoms that the health room staff screen for and will result in quarantine are cough, difficulty breathing, new loss of taste or smell, fever ≥100.4°, sore throat, severe Headache, diarrhea or vomiting"
Still ... cough (allergies, reflux), a sore throat (yelled too much at your sports game or playing with friends), a headache (migraines are a problem for many and it is utter stupidity to quarantine a class based on a headache). Diarrhea also quite common. A kid eats the wrong food or has an irritable bowel, everyone is quarantined.
Parents need to read between the lines and not report things to school unless a kid is actually sick. That's unfortunate, as this system only works with transparency and honesty, but with this utter nonsense, it just creates incentives not to report anything.
Anonymous wrote:cough
difficulty breathing
new loss of taste or smell
fever ≥100.4°
sore throat
severe headache,
diarrhea
vomiting
Those seem perfectly reasonable.
Anonymous wrote:Just get a test. Makes sense to me
Anonymous wrote:This is the dumbest policy in a long line of many. Allergies, asthma, chronic headaches, cold season coming up. It's utter nonsense. Seriously, how stupid can people be and feel like they need to one up the CDC and state officials?
Anonymous wrote:Apparently the new “guidance” confirms what we’ve been hearing. If a child has “symptoms” associated with COVID (could be a runny nose) their close contacts (this has been interpreted as the entire class in many schools) are quarantined for ten days.
This is completely ludicrous and not based in science or CDC guidelines.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Apparently the new “guidance” confirms what we’ve been hearing. If a child has “symptoms” associated with COVID (could be a runny nose) their close contacts (this has been interpreted as the entire class in many schools) are quarantined for ten days.
This is completely ludicrous and not based in science or CDC guidelines.
It’s not “symptoms,” it’s symptom! One symptom!
“ This is particularly important as if your child has any of the following single symptoms they will be sent home and not be able to return to school until they have a negative test, alternate diagnosis, or complete a full 10-day quarantine. During that period of time, all other students who have been in their close contact will have to be in a temporary quarantine while the other families wait on the outcome of that testing for your child. This could be potentially disruptive to your children and families moving in and out of quarantine and to avoid it takes all of us working together. It is a collective responsibility that we exercise extreme caution and be conservative in our approach.
The single symptoms that the health room staff screen for and will result in quarantine are cough, difficulty breathing, new loss of taste or smell, fever ≥100.4°, sore throat, severe Headache, diarrhea or vomiting. Please do not send your children to school with any of these symptoms. This is essential for us to continue to remain in school without quarantine.”
What choice do they have, though? I'm in favor of in-person and my kids went back in spring. But what else can they do?
It also doesn't say runny nose, at least, because then no one would be in school from Nov.-March.
What else can they do? They can not quarantine entire classrooms of masked kids based on one sniffle. They could follow the CDC guidelines for a start!
Runny nose and sniffles are not on the list.
"symptoms that the health room staff screen for and will result in quarantine are cough, difficulty breathing, new loss of taste or smell, fever ≥100.4°, sore throat, severe Headache, diarrhea or vomiting"
Anonymous wrote:cough
difficulty breathing
new loss of taste or smell
fever ≥100.4°
sore throat
severe headache,
diarrhea
vomiting
Those seem perfectly reasonable.