Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If her daughter has no symptoms and had a negative test she can go to daycare and doesn’t need to quarantine. I’m very cautious but give me a break w this. If everyone quarantined every time they were near someone who had covid, no one would ever go to work/school.
+1
At this point, people getting angry about someone who sent her exposed but asymptomatic kid who had a negative rapid test are a bigger problem than those who send their kids in under these circumstances. Move. On. This level of hostility and divisiveness are worse for society than any possible risk from said asymptomatic kid.
Everyone agrees to the policies set by the daycare when they signed up. Of course other parents can be frustrated if people aren’t following the rules they agreed upon.
Not everyone agreed to this. The rules changed for many who were enrolled pre-pandemic and we are obviously not in a strong place of negotiating power. And whoever runs the organizations making public health recommendations clearly don’t have young kids or understand the survival behavior of people who need their paycheck. Parents of young kids who can’t afford to quit their jobs or hire nannies are about to go into year #3 of this pandemic and cannot sustain staying home for extended periods of time just in case their kid might get sick in the next 10 days. It’s actually time for a little civil disobedience so health departments and daycares are forced to create rules based in reality.
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:Anonymous wrote:If her daughter has no symptoms and had a negative test she can go to daycare and doesn’t need to quarantine. I’m very cautious but give me a break w this. If everyone quarantined every time they were near someone who had covid, no one would ever go to work/school.
+1
At this point, people getting angry about someone who sent her exposed but asymptomatic kid who had a negative rapid test are a bigger problem than those who send their kids in under these circumstances. Move. On. This level of hostility and divisiveness are worse for society than any possible risk from said asymptomatic kid.
Everyone agrees to the policies set by the daycare when they signed up. Of course other parents can be frustrated if people aren’t following the rules they agreed upon.