Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m highly debating just pulling my ES child out and planning to homeschool the first quarter.
Unless I see a better plan to keep kids safe that are months(possibly weeks) away from being vaccinated, I’m not sending him.
I'm comfortable with the HVAC improvements. I think that's a good plan to keep kids safe.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m highly debating just pulling my ES child out and planning to homeschool the first quarter.
Unless I see a better plan to keep kids safe that are months(possibly weeks) away from being vaccinated, I’m not sending him.
Was your ES in school in spring?
Are you able to keep your ES kid in an environment with < 2% spread?
Anonymous wrote:I’m highly debating just pulling my ES child out and planning to homeschool the first quarter.
Unless I see a better plan to keep kids safe that are months(possibly weeks) away from being vaccinated, I’m not sending him.
Anonymous wrote:I’m highly debating just pulling my ES child out and planning to homeschool the first quarter.
Unless I see a better plan to keep kids safe that are months(possibly weeks) away from being vaccinated, I’m not sending him.
Anonymous wrote:I’m highly debating just pulling my ES child out and planning to homeschool the first quarter.
Unless I see a better plan to keep kids safe that are months(possibly weeks) away from being vaccinated, I’m not sending him.
Anonymous wrote:I’m highly debating just pulling my ES child out and planning to homeschool the first quarter.
Unless I see a better plan to keep kids safe that are months(possibly weeks) away from being vaccinated, I’m not sending him.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What is RSV?
A respiratory infection that usually appears in winter and is serious in babies (especially preemies or immunocompromised babies) and the old. You can get it multiple times in your life, but will have some protection from prior infection. In the vast majority of ES kids and adults not including seniors it will be a cold.
https://www.cdc.gov/rsv/index.html
My son was hospitalized with RSV. That virus is terrible...
Get ready for people to tell you that it didn’t really happen, it wasn’t that bad, and/or that’s too bad but who cares if only one kid got it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What is RSV?
A respiratory infection that usually appears in winter and is serious in babies (especially preemies or immunocompromised babies) and the old. You can get it multiple times in your life, but will have some protection from prior infection. In the vast majority of ES kids and adults not including seniors it will be a cold.
https://www.cdc.gov/rsv/index.html
My son was hospitalized with RSV. That virus is terrible...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As a teacher, I support a vaccine mandate. We need to do everything we can to protect the little ones who aren’t vaccinated yet.
Children don’t need vaccinations against covid, their risk is negligible.
Depends on the child. I saw a news article that mentioned two that died. It irks me that they never mention how old these children are. But anyway, it did disclose that one if them was a patient that was being treated for something else. So I think kids who have health issues will be at more risk.
The child may have died of that something else.
A JHU study analyzed all pediatric COVID deaths in the US and none occurred without co-morbidities. Statistically the chance of a child dying of COVID is less than that of a vaccinated 35 year old. Can it happen? Sure, but it's down in the .002% range. Yes over a large population that's still a few hundred kids, as we've seen, but it's safer than many things. I'll still vaccinate my ES kids when it becomes available, but I don't worry about them. Those who have co-morbidities should be able to do Online Campus, and if they missed that window than Virtual Virginia or VAVA K-12.
I have MULTIPLE friends and family members working in hospitals in the south (Florida and Mississippi. Covid is affecting children more than they have seen before and they are being admitted to hospital more than has been seen before. I do believe that our unvaccinated kids are at risk and that our school system is going to struggle with how to proceed.
The UK had school open during their entire Delta surge. Infection fatality rate was far, far lower there than during Alpha (.2% versus 2-3%, and that's the percentage only of those who were actually infected).
Yes, more cases does mean more chance for kids to have an adverse reaction, because a small percent of a larger number is bigger than a small percent of a smaller number. That doesn't guarantee that the sky is falling, though. Look at the real world data.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What is RSV?
A respiratory infection that usually appears in winter and is serious in babies (especially preemies or immunocompromised babies) and the old. You can get it multiple times in your life, but will have some protection from prior infection. In the vast majority of ES kids and adults not including seniors it will be a cold.
https://www.cdc.gov/rsv/index.html
Anonymous wrote:What is RSV?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:As a teacher, I support a vaccine mandate. We need to do everything we can to protect the little ones who aren’t vaccinated yet.
Children don’t need vaccinations against covid, their risk is negligible.
Depends on the child. I saw a news article that mentioned two that died. It irks me that they never mention how old these children are. But anyway, it did disclose that one if them was a patient that was being treated for something else. So I think kids who have health issues will be at more risk.
The child may have died of that something else.
A JHU study analyzed all pediatric COVID deaths in the US and none occurred without co-morbidities. Statistically the chance of a child dying of COVID is less than that of a vaccinated 35 year old. Can it happen? Sure, but it's down in the .002% range. Yes over a large population that's still a few hundred kids, as we've seen, but it's safer than many things. I'll still vaccinate my ES kids when it becomes available, but I don't worry about them. Those who have co-morbidities should be able to do Online Campus, and if they missed that window than Virtual Virginia or VAVA K-12.
I have MULTIPLE friends and family members working in hospitals in the south (Florida and Mississippi. Covid is affecting children more than they have seen before and they are being admitted to hospital more than has been seen before. I do believe that our unvaccinated kids are at risk and that our school system is going to struggle with how to proceed.