Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:FFS, are they in a 2021 time loop? PCR tests are rarely recmended these days with good reason. Sounds like they want to keep numbers down today for some reason. Totally disrespectful and unprofessional.
You are totally wrong that PCR tests are not recommended! You are part of the denial loop. People who gave up about Covid are not bothering to test which is keeping this virus rampant.
The at home tests do not pick up the strain of Covid early. No entity should accept an at home test for proof of a negative.
The day care was wrong for failing to timely notify you.
You can say this until you are blue in the face, but below is a link to Kaiser Permanente's guide for when to get a PCR test. If you're too lazy to click on the link (my guess is you are), it basically says don't bother with a PCR unless your doctor tells you you need one, or it's being required for an event or activity.
https://healthy.kaiserpermanente.org/content/dam/kporg/covid-19/testing/choose-the-right-covid-test-flier-ada-co-mas-nw-hi-en-2022-9.pdf
Who cares about Kaiser Permanente? When did they become the CDC?
Anonymous wrote:The hysteria is really something. So happy to be moving to Florida where normal people live normal lives.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Also, at this point we need to be having the "who cares" conversation if someone gets COVID. Daycare populations = usually toddlers and young women. These are not high-risk populations generally, and if you as an individual teacher or child are high-risk, then you personally should not work at or attend a daycare. The onus should be on individuals to get as fully vaccinated and boosted as possible (including toddlers, who can now be vaccinated) and then if someone gets COVID, treat it like the flu.
No there are a lot of older women as well and pregnant women so not everyone is low risk.
Yes if I find out Sunday night daycare suddenly required PCR instead of rapid tests would be annoyed since it would likely mean missing a day of work. (Another single mom here.) OTH if it was a response to an evolving situation I would also get the lack of notice even if I was annoyed about it.
Then those individuals can either find another job (nanny for example) with lower exposure or choose to wear a high-quality mask. My child's daycare has strict policies but I never see staff wearing N95, KN95 masks. Yes they are totally annoying to wear all day (my relatives work in healthcare and wear them 12h at a time). But if you are worried about your risk as an adult htere are steps you can take
Anonymous wrote:Also, at this point we need to be having the "who cares" conversation if someone gets COVID. Daycare populations = usually toddlers and young women. These are not high-risk populations generally, and if you as an individual teacher or child are high-risk, then you personally should not work at or attend a daycare. The onus should be on individuals to get as fully vaccinated and boosted as possible (including toddlers, who can now be vaccinated) and then if someone gets COVID, treat it like the flu.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:FFS, are they in a 2021 time loop? PCR tests are rarely recmended these days with good reason. Sounds like they want to keep numbers down today for some reason. Totally disrespectful and unprofessional.
You are totally wrong that PCR tests are not recommended! You are part of the denial loop. People who gave up about Covid are not bothering to test which is keeping this virus rampant.
The at home tests do not pick up the strain of Covid early. No entity should accept an at home test for proof of a negative.
The day care was wrong for failing to timely notify you.
You can say this until you are blue in the face, but below is a link to Kaiser Permanente's guide for when to get a PCR test. If you're too lazy to click on the link (my guess is you are), it basically says don't bother with a PCR unless your doctor tells you you need one, or it's being required for an event or activity.
https://healthy.kaiserpermanente.org/content/dam/kporg/covid-19/testing/choose-the-right-covid-test-flier-ada-co-mas-nw-hi-en-2022-9.pdf
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are you in DC proper, OP? We recently left a daycare in Arlington that I thought was nuts, but this is a new level of insane. Does this daycare intend to go out of business? Because it is a very small minority of people left willing to agree to that nonsense.
No, we’re in MoCo. They’re trying to sell this as requirements the State is imposing. It’s clearly not. I wouldn’t mind the test to return if you have Covid symptoms (rapid or PCR as long as we have advanced notice… but they’re fine for a rapid test for out of town travel, so what’s the logic there?). But they really think I’m not going to send my kid to school when I have a headache? That’s the day they definitely go.
Anonymous wrote:Are you in DC proper, OP? We recently left a daycare in Arlington that I thought was nuts, but this is a new level of insane. Does this daycare intend to go out of business? Because it is a very small minority of people left willing to agree to that nonsense.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: What I said was that requiring a PCR for a previously-symptomatic child to return to daycare before a full 10-day exclusion could help prevent a superspreader event. That is in line with CDC guidance and that of other medical professionals. I did not say that would be the only policy put into place to prevent superspreader events.
A 10-day exclusion is not the current CDC guidance. Current guidance as of August states you don’t have to stay home after exposure if you don’t develop symptoms. It recommends testing 6 days after a known exposure, and you can end your isolation with a negative test. Even if the child had tested positive, which OP’s didn’t, CDC says isolation can end “after day 5 if you are fever free for 24 hours”.
If they can mask consistently. If they can't, because they are under 2, or are in a program that includes nap or meals, then it's 10 days according to CDC.
Anonymous wrote:OP here - we got the updated COVID policy from daycare today. Our rules include:
- everyone over 2 wears a mask, regardless of vaccination status
- no parents in the building, and no line allowed outside the building. Parents must wait in their car if another parent is at the door for pickup/drop off
- kids can’t come to school if they, or anyone else in the family, has one or more of these symptoms: fever, coughing, runny or stuffy nose, difficulty breathing, headache, stomach pain, diarrhea, or vomit
- if the kid has the above symptoms, they need a PCR to come back
- if we go out of town, the entire family needs to take rapid tests before the kid can come back
- we have to notify the daycare of a positive COVID case in the house (definitely reasonable)
- we have to notify the daycare if anyone in the house was exposed to COVID, regardless of test results
This is not what we agreed to when we enrolled. We’re going to start looking for a new daycare… unless this is just normal in the DMV?
Anonymous wrote:OP here - we got the updated COVID policy from daycare today. Our rules include:
- everyone over 2 wears a mask, regardless of vaccination status
- no parents in the building, and no line allowed outside the building. Parents must wait in their car if another parent is at the door for pickup/drop off
- kids can’t come to school if they, or anyone else in the family, has one or more of these symptoms: fever, coughing, runny or stuffy nose, difficulty breathing, headache, stomach pain, diarrhea, or vomit
- if the kid has the above symptoms, they need a PCR to come back
- if we go out of town, the entire family needs to take rapid tests before the kid can come back
- we have to notify the daycare of a positive COVID case in the house (definitely reasonable)
- we have to notify the daycare if anyone in the house was exposed to COVID, regardless of test results
This is not what we agreed to when we enrolled. We’re going to start looking for a new daycare… unless this is just normal in the DMV?
Anonymous wrote:OP here - we got the updated COVID policy from daycare today. Our rules include:
- everyone over 2 wears a mask, regardless of vaccination status
- no parents in the building, and no line allowed outside the building. Parents must wait in their car if another parent is at the door for pickup/drop off
- kids can’t come to school if they, or anyone else in the family, has one or more of these symptoms: fever, coughing, runny or stuffy nose, difficulty breathing, headache, stomach pain, diarrhea, or vomit
- if the kid has the above symptoms, they need a PCR to come back
- if we go out of town, the entire family needs to take rapid tests before the kid can come back
- we have to notify the daycare of a positive COVID case in the house (definitely reasonable)
- we have to notify the daycare if anyone in the house was exposed to COVID, regardless of test results
This is not what we agreed to when we enrolled. We’re going to start looking for a new daycare… unless this is just normal in the DMV?
Anonymous wrote:OP here - we got the updated COVID policy from daycare today. Our rules include:
- everyone over 2 wears a mask, regardless of vaccination status
- no parents in the building, and no line allowed outside the building. Parents must wait in their car if another parent is at the door for pickup/drop off
- kids can’t come to school if they, or anyone else in the family, has one or more of these symptoms: fever, coughing, runny or stuffy nose, difficulty breathing, headache, stomach pain, diarrhea, or vomit
- if the kid has the above symptoms, they need a PCR to come back
- if we go out of town, the entire family needs to take rapid tests before the kid can come back
- we have to notify the daycare of a positive COVID case in the house (definitely reasonable)
- we have to notify the daycare if anyone in the house was exposed to COVID, regardless of test results
This is not what we agreed to when we enrolled. We’re going to start looking for a new daycare… unless this is just normal in the DMV?