Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm in a similar situation as your friend, OP, and I'm sending my kid to school. (Albeit, he's 11 and vaxxed.) We were at a get together Saturday evening with 3 other couples. Yesterday, one family tested positive. We spoke with the school and health department, and no one, including unvaxxed and preschoolers, besides the family who tested positive, is required to quarantine. A year ago I would have paused longer and thought the responsible thing would be to stay home for a few days. Now, I realize 15 people, none with symptoms, can put life on hold, missing school/work, "just in case".
This is different because your son is vaxxed. According to the CDC fully vaxed people don't need to quarantine unless they develop symptoms. Maybe that guidance is outdated because of Omicron, but at least based on the technical current guidance you are perfectly fine here.
SP as above - I glossed over the part where you said the health department told unvaxed preschoolers who were exposed that they do not have to quarantine. That's news to me. The health department told you there are just no quarantine requirements whatsoever anymore for close contacts?
Anonymous wrote:I bet there’s is one covid-contacted kid in every daycare room in every major metropolitan areas. I would have kept my kid home from preschool with that close a contact but it’s three hour a day preschool and I don’t need the childcare.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Our schools now have a test to stay policy, where close contacts are allowed to stay in school as long as they rapid test negative on days 2 and 5 and remain asymptomatic.
But is that for vaccinated or unvaccinated students?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm in a similar situation as your friend, OP, and I'm sending my kid to school. (Albeit, he's 11 and vaxxed.) We were at a get together Saturday evening with 3 other couples. Yesterday, one family tested positive. We spoke with the school and health department, and no one, including unvaxxed and preschoolers, besides the family who tested positive, is required to quarantine. A year ago I would have paused longer and thought the responsible thing would be to stay home for a few days. Now, I realize 15 people, none with symptoms, can put life on hold, missing school/work, "just in case".
This is different because your son is vaxxed. According to the CDC fully vaxed people don't need to quarantine unless they develop symptoms. Maybe that guidance is outdated because of Omicron, but at least based on the technical current guidance you are perfectly fine here.
Yes, but of the 7 kids, 1 preschooler is unvaxxed, 2 adolescents have only 1 of their shots, 1 adolescent is less than 2 weeks out from his 2nd shot, my son is fully vaxxed, and the other 11 year old is covid positive. None of us - except the family that tested positive - is required to quarantine. Obviously if symptoms appear, we will - but as of now, all are in school/daycare.
You had a get together inside with three families, including unvaccinated kids, right before school was set to restart during the omicron wave.
You are a complete douche bag, PP, and part of the problem. So sick of people like you.
Haha, yes, how dare people move on with their lives now that those who want a vaccine can get a vaccine, even with the risk of potentially suffering a cold. No enjoyment until covid has been wiped from the face of the earth!! (Which it never will be, btw)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I agree with you OP. We were just a close contact and I kept both my kids ages 3 and 10 months home from daycare for the full 10 days and tested negative 3x
how nice you are able to do so.
DP, but of course keeping your kids home is inconvenient. But that’s something all of us have to deal with sometimes, it’s part of having kids. If your claiming you or others would be “unable to do so” - what would you do if the kid actually had Covid? Or rsv or the flu or anything else? You’d keep them home, of course. So the issue isn’t that you’re unable, it’s that you don’t want to bother and you don’t view it as your responsibility to help limit the spread.
NP, but you're very privileged if you think staying home with a sick kid is the same as staying home for 10 days on the CHANCE your kid has covid.
Also, there is most certainly a chance OP’s kid has Covid, and yet she does not feel compelled to keep HER kid home…
Yes, and Kamala Harris and I both have a chance of becoming US President, because we’re both US citizens over age 35, so the odds are pretty much the same for both of us.
I don’t think you paid attention to the details in OP’s post.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I agree with you OP. We were just a close contact and I kept both my kids ages 3 and 10 months home from daycare for the full 10 days and tested negative 3x
how nice you are able to do so.
DP, but of course keeping your kids home is inconvenient. But that’s something all of us have to deal with sometimes, it’s part of having kids. If your claiming you or others would be “unable to do so” - what would you do if the kid actually had Covid? Or rsv or the flu or anything else? You’d keep them home, of course. So the issue isn’t that you’re unable, it’s that you don’t want to bother and you don’t view it as your responsibility to help limit the spread.
NP, but you're very privileged if you think staying home with a sick kid is the same as staying home for 10 days on the CHANCE your kid has covid.
Also, there is most certainly a chance OP’s kid has Covid, and yet she does not feel compelled to keep HER kid home…
Yes, and Kamala Harris and I both have a chance of becoming US President, because we’re both US citizens over age 35, so the odds are pretty much the same for both of us.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I agree with you OP. We were just a close contact and I kept both my kids ages 3 and 10 months home from daycare for the full 10 days and tested negative 3x
how nice you are able to do so.
DP, but of course keeping your kids home is inconvenient. But that’s something all of us have to deal with sometimes, it’s part of having kids. If your claiming you or others would be “unable to do so” - what would you do if the kid actually had Covid? Or rsv or the flu or anything else? You’d keep them home, of course. So the issue isn’t that you’re unable, it’s that you don’t want to bother and you don’t view it as your responsibility to help limit the spread.
NP, but you're very privileged if you think staying home with a sick kid is the same as staying home for 10 days on the CHANCE your kid has covid.
Also, there is most certainly a chance OP’s kid has Covid, and yet she does not feel compelled to keep HER kid home…
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I agree with you OP. We were just a close contact and I kept both my kids ages 3 and 10 months home from daycare for the full 10 days and tested negative 3x
how nice you are able to do so.
DP, but of course keeping your kids home is inconvenient. But that’s something all of us have to deal with sometimes, it’s part of having kids. If your claiming you or others would be “unable to do so” - what would you do if the kid actually had Covid? Or rsv or the flu or anything else? You’d keep them home, of course. So the issue isn’t that you’re unable, it’s that you don’t want to bother and you don’t view it as your responsibility to help limit the spread.
NP, but you're very privileged if you think staying home with a sick kid is the same as staying home for 10 days on the CHANCE your kid has covid.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I agree with you OP. We were just a close contact and I kept both my kids ages 3 and 10 months home from daycare for the full 10 days and tested negative 3x
how nice you are able to do so.
DP, but of course keeping your kids home is inconvenient. But that’s something all of us have to deal with sometimes, it’s part of having kids. If your claiming you or others would be “unable to do so” - what would you do if the kid actually had Covid? Or rsv or the flu or anything else? You’d keep them home, of course. So the issue isn’t that you’re unable, it’s that you don’t want to bother and you don’t view it as your responsibility to help limit the spread.
NP, but you're very privileged if you think staying home with a sick kid is the same as staying home for 10 days on the CHANCE your kid has covid.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I agree with you OP. We were just a close contact and I kept both my kids ages 3 and 10 months home from daycare for the full 10 days and tested negative 3x
how nice you are able to do so.
DP, but of course keeping your kids home is inconvenient. But that’s something all of us have to deal with sometimes, it’s part of having kids. If your claiming you or others would be “unable to do so” - what would you do if the kid actually had Covid? Or rsv or the flu or anything else? You’d keep them home, of course. So the issue isn’t that you’re unable, it’s that you don’t want to bother and you don’t view it as your responsibility to help limit the spread.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I agree with you OP. We were just a close contact and I kept both my kids ages 3 and 10 months home from daycare for the full 10 days and tested negative 3x
how nice you are able to do so.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm in a similar situation as your friend, OP, and I'm sending my kid to school. (Albeit, he's 11 and vaxxed.) We were at a get together Saturday evening with 3 other couples. Yesterday, one family tested positive. We spoke with the school and health department, and no one, including unvaxxed and preschoolers, besides the family who tested positive, is required to quarantine. A year ago I would have paused longer and thought the responsible thing would be to stay home for a few days. Now, I realize 15 people, none with symptoms, can put life on hold, missing school/work, "just in case".
This is different because your son is vaxxed. According to the CDC fully vaxed people don't need to quarantine unless they develop symptoms. Maybe that guidance is outdated because of Omicron, but at least based on the technical current guidance you are perfectly fine here.
Yes, but of the 7 kids, 1 preschooler is unvaxxed, 2 adolescents have only 1 of their shots, 1 adolescent is less than 2 weeks out from his 2nd shot, my son is fully vaxxed, and the other 11 year old is covid positive. None of us - except the family that tested positive - is required to quarantine. Obviously if symptoms appear, we will - but as of now, all are in school/daycare.