Anonymous
Post 07/31/2022 07:57     Subject: New 2022-2023 Covid Plan and Guidelines

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Will they have weekly covid testing?


I hope not, but if they do, we will most certainly opt out of that nonsense.


+1


Screening testing is nothing but a giant money-maker for greedy companies at this point. It’s gross how much they bill for testing and how much they’ve profited. It’s totally unnecessary for mcps to pay for this.

Symptomatic testing only. And only if child displays a symptom that you would have tested over in 2019. Testing over sniffles is silly. Testing when child has a high fever and very sore throat, or vomiting makes sense. You want to rule out covid before testing for strep or flu so you get appropriate treatment.



So, clearly you have something to hide.
Anonymous
Post 07/31/2022 07:56     Subject: New 2022-2023 Covid Plan and Guidelines

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:If your kid had it this spring/summer, then you should realize it’s NBD.


If your loved one died, or you developed a long term complication, or you lost your job for taking too many sick days, then you should realize it isn't NBD. Or, also, if you have a brain in your head to realize that just because something was OK for you your experience isn't universal.



Exactly. We has a relative die last spring. My Covid has lasted weeks. It is a big deal.


It can be. Most often it’s not. Just how it is.


We can now see the importance of mental health at school as if this is your idea of compassion, no wonder these kids are struggling.


Covid can be serious. Usually it’s not. There you go.


It is serious when people are getting it over and over again every few months and it can rapidly be spread in schools. Keep denying. I feel for your kids.


DP. “Serious” is relative. Yes, covid is highly contagious, but health outcomes aren’t particularly different from other endemic viruses in non-elderly, vaccinated individuals. Similarly, covid doesn’t significantly change individuals’ overall risk profiles.


My relative who died was 50’s.


That’s an anecdote, not data. When looking at vaccinated/boosted individuals and adjusting for age, weekly covid mortality is on par with the flu during the winter. That's not to say some young, healthy people won't die, but that's the case with any disease. It's a big country-- outliers happen.


And, what if it is your child who dies? It will be ok with you?

Here we go again! Do you let your child ride in a car or swim in a pool? Part of life is managing risk. Both are more deadly for kids than Covid.


You miss the point that kids don’t live alone and there are safety precautions for both of those.
Anonymous
Post 07/31/2022 07:14     Subject: New 2022-2023 Covid Plan and Guidelines

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:If your kid had it this spring/summer, then you should realize it’s NBD.


If your loved one died, or you developed a long term complication, or you lost your job for taking too many sick days, then you should realize it isn't NBD. Or, also, if you have a brain in your head to realize that just because something was OK for you your experience isn't universal.



Exactly. We has a relative die last spring. My Covid has lasted weeks. It is a big deal.


It can be. Most often it’s not. Just how it is.


We can now see the importance of mental health at school as if this is your idea of compassion, no wonder these kids are struggling.


Covid can be serious. Usually it’s not. There you go.


It is serious when people are getting it over and over again every few months and it can rapidly be spread in schools. Keep denying. I feel for your kids.


DP. “Serious” is relative. Yes, covid is highly contagious, but health outcomes aren’t particularly different from other endemic viruses in non-elderly, vaccinated individuals. Similarly, covid doesn’t significantly change individuals’ overall risk profiles.


My relative who died was 50’s.


As someone who just turned 50, that's not very young. It's not unusual for people to start dying in this decade.
Anonymous
Post 07/31/2022 06:39     Subject: New 2022-2023 Covid Plan and Guidelines

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:If your kid had it this spring/summer, then you should realize it’s NBD.


If your loved one died, or you developed a long term complication, or you lost your job for taking too many sick days, then you should realize it isn't NBD. Or, also, if you have a brain in your head to realize that just because something was OK for you your experience isn't universal.



Exactly. We has a relative die last spring. My Covid has lasted weeks. It is a big deal.


It can be. Most often it’s not. Just how it is.


We can now see the importance of mental health at school as if this is your idea of compassion, no wonder these kids are struggling.


Covid can be serious. Usually it’s not. There you go.


It is serious when people are getting it over and over again every few months and it can rapidly be spread in schools. Keep denying. I feel for your kids.


DP. “Serious” is relative. Yes, covid is highly contagious, but health outcomes aren’t particularly different from other endemic viruses in non-elderly, vaccinated individuals. Similarly, covid doesn’t significantly change individuals’ overall risk profiles.


More people have died in the last three years of Covid than colds or flu.


And? We didn’t have a vaccine for much of that. And even after the vaccine was available, many of the people dying didn’t get it. And those that did and still died were overwhelmingly elderly, with complicating medical conditions that would put them at higher risk of a variety of health conditions.

Covid makes up a small fraction of overall deaths.

Covid is a top 5 cause of death.


That data is old. Pre-vaccines. It also includes people who died *with covid* not *of covid*. Somebody investigated the pediatric “covid deaths” in California last year. A few were teens who overdosed but tested positive for covid during routine screening, for example. Talk to anyone who works in hospitals and they’ll tell you that covid death data is nuanced.
Anonymous
Post 07/31/2022 06:20     Subject: New 2022-2023 Covid Plan and Guidelines

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Will they have weekly covid testing?


I hope not, but if they do, we will most certainly opt out of that nonsense.


+1


Screening testing is nothing but a giant money-maker for greedy companies at this point. It’s gross how much they bill for testing and how much they’ve profited. It’s totally unnecessary for mcps to pay for this.

Symptomatic testing only. And only if child displays a symptom that you would have tested over in 2019. Testing over sniffles is silly. Testing when child has a high fever and very sore throat, or vomiting makes sense. You want to rule out covid before testing for strep or flu so you get appropriate treatment.

Anonymous
Post 07/31/2022 06:13     Subject: New 2022-2023 Covid Plan and Guidelines

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:If your kid had it this spring/summer, then you should realize it’s NBD.


If your loved one died, or you developed a long term complication, or you lost your job for taking too many sick days, then you should realize it isn't NBD. Or, also, if you have a brain in your head to realize that just because something was OK for you your experience isn't universal.



Exactly. We has a relative die last spring. My Covid has lasted weeks. It is a big deal.


It can be. Most often it’s not. Just how it is.


We can now see the importance of mental health at school as if this is your idea of compassion, no wonder these kids are struggling.


Covid can be serious. Usually it’s not. There you go.


It is serious when people are getting it over and over again every few months and it can rapidly be spread in schools. Keep denying. I feel for your kids.


DP. “Serious” is relative. Yes, covid is highly contagious, but health outcomes aren’t particularly different from other endemic viruses in non-elderly, vaccinated individuals. Similarly, covid doesn’t significantly change individuals’ overall risk profiles.


My relative who died was 50’s.


That’s an anecdote, not data. When looking at vaccinated/boosted individuals and adjusting for age, weekly covid mortality is on par with the flu during the winter. That's not to say some young, healthy people won't die, but that's the case with any disease. It's a big country-- outliers happen.


And, what if it is your child who dies? It will be ok with you?

Here we go again! Do you let your child ride in a car or swim in a pool? Part of life is managing risk. Both are more deadly for kids than Covid.
Anonymous
Post 07/31/2022 06:12     Subject: New 2022-2023 Covid Plan and Guidelines

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:If your kid had it this spring/summer, then you should realize it’s NBD.


If your loved one died, or you developed a long term complication, or you lost your job for taking too many sick days, then you should realize it isn't NBD. Or, also, if you have a brain in your head to realize that just because something was OK for you your experience isn't universal.



Exactly. We has a relative die last spring. My Covid has lasted weeks. It is a big deal.


It can be. Most often it’s not. Just how it is.


We can now see the importance of mental health at school as if this is your idea of compassion, no wonder these kids are struggling.


Covid can be serious. Usually it’s not. There you go.


It is serious when people are getting it over and over again every few months and it can rapidly be spread in schools. Keep denying. I feel for your kids.


DP. “Serious” is relative. Yes, covid is highly contagious, but health outcomes aren’t particularly different from other endemic viruses in non-elderly, vaccinated individuals. Similarly, covid doesn’t significantly change individuals’ overall risk profiles.


More people have died in the last three years of Covid than colds or flu.


And? We didn’t have a vaccine for much of that. And even after the vaccine was available, many of the people dying didn’t get it. And those that did and still died were overwhelmingly elderly, with complicating medical conditions that would put them at higher risk of a variety of health conditions.

Covid makes up a small fraction of overall deaths.

Covid is a top 5 cause of death.
Anonymous
Post 07/31/2022 01:39     Subject: New 2022-2023 Covid Plan and Guidelines

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:If your kid had it this spring/summer, then you should realize it’s NBD.


If your loved one died, or you developed a long term complication, or you lost your job for taking too many sick days, then you should realize it isn't NBD. Or, also, if you have a brain in your head to realize that just because something was OK for you your experience isn't universal.



Exactly. We has a relative die last spring. My Covid has lasted weeks. It is a big deal.


It can be. Most often it’s not. Just how it is.


We can now see the importance of mental health at school as if this is your idea of compassion, no wonder these kids are struggling.


Covid can be serious. Usually it’s not. There you go.


It is serious when people are getting it over and over again every few months and it can rapidly be spread in schools. Keep denying. I feel for your kids.


DP. “Serious” is relative. Yes, covid is highly contagious, but health outcomes aren’t particularly different from other endemic viruses in non-elderly, vaccinated individuals. Similarly, covid doesn’t significantly change individuals’ overall risk profiles.


My relative who died was 50’s.


That’s an anecdote, not data. When looking at vaccinated/boosted individuals and adjusting for age, weekly covid mortality is on par with the flu during the winter. That's not to say some young, healthy people won't die, but that's the case with any disease. It's a big country-- outliers happen.


And, what if it is your child who dies? It will be ok with you?
Anonymous
Post 07/31/2022 01:39     Subject: New 2022-2023 Covid Plan and Guidelines

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:If your kid had it this spring/summer, then you should realize it’s NBD.


If your loved one died, or you developed a long term complication, or you lost your job for taking too many sick days, then you should realize it isn't NBD. Or, also, if you have a brain in your head to realize that just because something was OK for you your experience isn't universal.



Exactly. We has a relative die last spring. My Covid has lasted weeks. It is a big deal.


It can be. Most often it’s not. Just how it is.


We can now see the importance of mental health at school as if this is your idea of compassion, no wonder these kids are struggling.


Covid can be serious. Usually it’s not. There you go.


It is serious when people are getting it over and over again every few months and it can rapidly be spread in schools. Keep denying. I feel for your kids.


DP. “Serious” is relative. Yes, covid is highly contagious, but health outcomes aren’t particularly different from other endemic viruses in non-elderly, vaccinated individuals. Similarly, covid doesn’t significantly change individuals’ overall risk profiles.


More people have died in the last three years of Covid than colds or flu.


And? We didn’t have a vaccine for much of that. And even after the vaccine was available, many of the people dying didn’t get it. And those that did and still died were overwhelmingly elderly, with complicating medical conditions that would put them at higher risk of a variety of health conditions.

Covid makes up a small fraction of overall deaths.


The great Covid denier.
Anonymous
Post 07/31/2022 00:04     Subject: New 2022-2023 Covid Plan and Guidelines

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:If your kid had it this spring/summer, then you should realize it’s NBD.


If your loved one died, or you developed a long term complication, or you lost your job for taking too many sick days, then you should realize it isn't NBD. Or, also, if you have a brain in your head to realize that just because something was OK for you your experience isn't universal.



Exactly. We has a relative die last spring. My Covid has lasted weeks. It is a big deal.


It can be. Most often it’s not. Just how it is.


We can now see the importance of mental health at school as if this is your idea of compassion, no wonder these kids are struggling.


Covid can be serious. Usually it’s not. There you go.


It is serious when people are getting it over and over again every few months and it can rapidly be spread in schools. Keep denying. I feel for your kids.


DP. “Serious” is relative. Yes, covid is highly contagious, but health outcomes aren’t particularly different from other endemic viruses in non-elderly, vaccinated individuals. Similarly, covid doesn’t significantly change individuals’ overall risk profiles.


More people have died in the last three years of Covid than colds or flu.


And? We didn’t have a vaccine for much of that. And even after the vaccine was available, many of the people dying didn’t get it. And those that did and still died were overwhelmingly elderly, with complicating medical conditions that would put them at higher risk of a variety of health conditions.

Covid makes up a small fraction of overall deaths.
Anonymous
Post 07/31/2022 00:00     Subject: New 2022-2023 Covid Plan and Guidelines

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:If your kid had it this spring/summer, then you should realize it’s NBD.


If your loved one died, or you developed a long term complication, or you lost your job for taking too many sick days, then you should realize it isn't NBD. Or, also, if you have a brain in your head to realize that just because something was OK for you your experience isn't universal.



Exactly. We has a relative die last spring. My Covid has lasted weeks. It is a big deal.


It can be. Most often it’s not. Just how it is.


We can now see the importance of mental health at school as if this is your idea of compassion, no wonder these kids are struggling.


Covid can be serious. Usually it’s not. There you go.


It is serious when people are getting it over and over again every few months and it can rapidly be spread in schools. Keep denying. I feel for your kids.


DP. “Serious” is relative. Yes, covid is highly contagious, but health outcomes aren’t particularly different from other endemic viruses in non-elderly, vaccinated individuals. Similarly, covid doesn’t significantly change individuals’ overall risk profiles.


My relative who died was 50’s.


That’s an anecdote, not data. When looking at vaccinated/boosted individuals and adjusting for age, weekly covid mortality is on par with the flu during the winter. That's not to say some young, healthy people won't die, but that's the case with any disease. It's a big country-- outliers happen.
Anonymous
Post 07/30/2022 23:50     Subject: New 2022-2023 Covid Plan and Guidelines

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:If your kid had it this spring/summer, then you should realize it’s NBD.


If your loved one died, or you developed a long term complication, or you lost your job for taking too many sick days, then you should realize it isn't NBD. Or, also, if you have a brain in your head to realize that just because something was OK for you your experience isn't universal.



Exactly. We has a relative die last spring. My Covid has lasted weeks. It is a big deal.


It can be. Most often it’s not. Just how it is.


We can now see the importance of mental health at school as if this is your idea of compassion, no wonder these kids are struggling.


Covid can be serious. Usually it’s not. There you go.


It is serious when people are getting it over and over again every few months and it can rapidly be spread in schools. Keep denying. I feel for your kids.


DP. “Serious” is relative. Yes, covid is highly contagious, but health outcomes aren’t particularly different from other endemic viruses in non-elderly, vaccinated individuals. Similarly, covid doesn’t significantly change individuals’ overall risk profiles.


More people have died in the last three years of Covid than colds or flu.
Anonymous
Post 07/30/2022 23:49     Subject: New 2022-2023 Covid Plan and Guidelines

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:If your kid had it this spring/summer, then you should realize it’s NBD.


If your loved one died, or you developed a long term complication, or you lost your job for taking too many sick days, then you should realize it isn't NBD. Or, also, if you have a brain in your head to realize that just because something was OK for you your experience isn't universal.



Exactly. We has a relative die last spring. My Covid has lasted weeks. It is a big deal.


It can be. Most often it’s not. Just how it is.


We can now see the importance of mental health at school as if this is your idea of compassion, no wonder these kids are struggling.


Covid can be serious. Usually it’s not. There you go.


It is serious when people are getting it over and over again every few months and it can rapidly be spread in schools. Keep denying. I feel for your kids.


DP. “Serious” is relative. Yes, covid is highly contagious, but health outcomes aren’t particularly different from other endemic viruses in non-elderly, vaccinated individuals. Similarly, covid doesn’t significantly change individuals’ overall risk profiles.


My relative who died was 50’s.
Anonymous
Post 07/30/2022 23:47     Subject: New 2022-2023 Covid Plan and Guidelines

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:If your kid had it this spring/summer, then you should realize it’s NBD.


If your loved one died, or you developed a long term complication, or you lost your job for taking too many sick days, then you should realize it isn't NBD. Or, also, if you have a brain in your head to realize that just because something was OK for you your experience isn't universal.



Exactly. We has a relative die last spring. My Covid has lasted weeks. It is a big deal.


It can be. Most often it’s not. Just how it is.


We can now see the importance of mental health at school as if this is your idea of compassion, no wonder these kids are struggling.


Covid can be serious. Usually it’s not. There you go.


It is serious when people are getting it over and over again every few months and it can rapidly be spread in schools. Keep denying. I feel for your kids.


DP. “Serious” is relative. Yes, covid is highly contagious, but health outcomes aren’t particularly different from other endemic viruses in non-elderly, vaccinated individuals. Similarly, covid doesn’t significantly change individuals’ overall risk profiles.
Anonymous
Post 07/30/2022 23:34     Subject: New 2022-2023 Covid Plan and Guidelines

Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:If your kid had it this spring/summer, then you should realize it’s NBD.


If your loved one died, or you developed a long term complication, or you lost your job for taking too many sick days, then you should realize it isn't NBD. Or, also, if you have a brain in your head to realize that just because something was OK for you your experience isn't universal.



Exactly. We has a relative die last spring. My Covid has lasted weeks. It is a big deal.


It can be. Most often it’s not. Just how it is.


We can now see the importance of mental health at school as if this is your idea of compassion, no wonder these kids are struggling.


Covid can be serious. Usually it’s not. There you go.


It is serious when people are getting it over and over again every few months and it can rapidly be spread in schools. Keep denying. I feel for your kids.