Anonymous wrote:Gayles is such a hypocrite. Thinks he’s above the CDC guidance for his personal international travel yet talks MCPS into a policy stricter than what the CDC recommends for students. Jerk.
Anonymous wrote:Gayles is such a hypocrite. Thinks he’s above the CDC guidance for his personal international travel yet talks MCPS into a policy stricter than what the CDC recommends for students. Jerk.
Anonymous wrote:Gayles is such a hypocrite. Thinks he’s above the CDC guidance for his personal international travel yet talks MCPS into a policy stricter than what the CDC recommends for students. Jerk.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:cough
difficulty breathing
new loss of taste or smell
fever ≥100.4°
sore throat
severe headache,
diarrhea
vomiting
Those seem perfectly reasonable.
These seem reasonable to me, too.
My kid has ongoing coughing once in a while ( like a few times a day), and is currently having diarrhera because we are told by doctor to give daily Miralax till the end of year. I am surprised Miralax cause diarrhea but she is seriously constipated. Should I give miralax daily on school days per doctor instruction or not? Can line define coughing and diarrhea? And sometimes she gags on food and vomit if she eats too fast,that is considered vomiting?
I have allergic asthmatic cough myself; I’ll need to be sure to keep it under control this fall with antihistamine and steroid inhaler but otherwise, if I had an uncontrollable cough I Should stay home.
No one should be in school with the other things... although as long as kids don’t complain of sore throat no one will know they have one.
Sure, I can agree that kids should go home if they have any of those symptoms. What I don’t agree is that the rest of the class should go home too. That’s insane!
Exactly. Sick kid goes home, the rest stays. Conduct more frequent surveillance testing on the rest of the class- this is where rapid antigen tests would work well.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:cough
difficulty breathing
new loss of taste or smell
fever ≥100.4°
sore throat
severe headache,
diarrhea
vomiting
Those seem perfectly reasonable.
These seem reasonable to me, too.
My kid has ongoing coughing once in a while ( like a few times a day), and is currently having diarrhera because we are told by doctor to give daily Miralax till the end of year. I am surprised Miralax cause diarrhea but she is seriously constipated. Should I give miralax daily on school days per doctor instruction or not? Can line define coughing and diarrhea? And sometimes she gags on food and vomit if she eats too fast,that is considered vomiting?
I have allergic asthmatic cough myself; I’ll need to be sure to keep it under control this fall with antihistamine and steroid inhaler but otherwise, if I had an uncontrollable cough I Should stay home.
No one should be in school with the other things... although as long as kids don’t complain of sore throat no one will know they have one.
Sure, I can agree that kids should go home if they have any of those symptoms. What I don’t agree is that the rest of the class should go home too. That’s insane!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:cough
difficulty breathing
new loss of taste or smell
fever ≥100.4°
sore throat
severe headache,
diarrhea
vomiting
Those seem perfectly reasonable.
These seem reasonable to me, too.
My kid has ongoing coughing once in a while ( like a few times a day), and is currently having diarrhera because we are told by doctor to give daily Miralax till the end of year. I am surprised Miralax cause diarrhea but she is seriously constipated. Should I give miralax daily on school days per doctor instruction or not? Can line define coughing and diarrhea? And sometimes she gags on food and vomit if she eats too fast,that is considered vomiting?
I have allergic asthmatic cough myself; I’ll need to be sure to keep it under control this fall with antihistamine and steroid inhaler but otherwise, if I had an uncontrollable cough I Should stay home.
No one should be in school with the other things... although as long as kids don’t complain of sore throat no one will know they have one.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kid has ongoing coughing once in a while ( like a few times a day), and is currently having diarrhera because we are told by doctor to give daily Miralax till the end of year. I am surprised Miralax cause diarrhea but she is seriously constipated. Should I give miralax daily on school days per doctor instruction or not? Can line define coughing and diarrhea? And sometimes she gags on food and vomit if she eats too fast,that is considered vomiting?
Hmmm. There's a lot going on there. Good chance the whole school shuts down and they set up a perimeter around the building with police tape. They may even declare the school a hot zone and call in the CDC. There's no overreaction possible that MCPS can't top.
The guidance clearly says symptoms that are not diagnosed as some other ailment. Easiest thing would be to get a note from the doctor in case the nurse discovers the diarrhea.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My kid has ongoing coughing once in a while ( like a few times a day), and is currently having diarrhera because we are told by doctor to give daily Miralax till the end of year. I am surprised Miralax cause diarrhea but she is seriously constipated. Should I give miralax daily on school days per doctor instruction or not? Can line define coughing and diarrhea? And sometimes she gags on food and vomit if she eats too fast,that is considered vomiting?
Hmmm. There's a lot going on there. Good chance the whole school shuts down and they set up a perimeter around the building with police tape. They may even declare the school a hot zone and call in the CDC. There's no overreaction possible that MCPS can't top.
Anonymous wrote:My kid has ongoing coughing once in a while ( like a few times a day), and is currently having diarrhera because we are told by doctor to give daily Miralax till the end of year. I am surprised Miralax cause diarrhea but she is seriously constipated. Should I give miralax daily on school days per doctor instruction or not? Can line define coughing and diarrhea? And sometimes she gags on food and vomit if she eats too fast,that is considered vomiting?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:cough
difficulty breathing
new loss of taste or smell
fever ≥100.4°
sore throat
severe headache,
diarrhea
vomiting
Those seem perfectly reasonable.
These seem reasonable to me, too.
I have allergic asthmatic cough myself; I’ll need to be sure to keep it under control this fall with antihistamine and steroid inhaler but otherwise, if I had an uncontrollable cough I Should stay home.
No one should be in school with the other things... although as long as kids don’t complain of sore throat no one will know they have one.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:cough
difficulty breathing
new loss of taste or smell
fever ≥100.4°
sore throat
severe headache,
diarrhea
vomiting
Those seem perfectly reasonable.
These seem reasonable to me, too.
My kid has ongoing coughing once in a while ( like a few times a day), and is currently having diarrhera because we are told by doctor to give daily Miralax till the end of year. I am surprised Miralax cause diarrhea but she is seriously constipated. Should I give miralax daily on school days per doctor instruction or not? Can line define coughing and diarrhea? And sometimes she gags on food and vomit if she eats too fast,that is considered vomiting?
I have allergic asthmatic cough myself; I’ll need to be sure to keep it under control this fall with antihistamine and steroid inhaler but otherwise, if I had an uncontrollable cough I Should stay home.
No one should be in school with the other things... although as long as kids don’t complain of sore throat no one will know they have one.