Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I said a week ago was too early to close schools, but I think now and next week is the right time. There are cases and some local transmission. It’s a good time to start closing things.
I think Fairfax and Arlington will close next week.
I thought a good time was before viruses start to spread widely, based on history and other countries' experience?
I'm not convinced it has spread widely yet. When it had spread widely in Italy, the hospitals were overwhelmed. I have not heard any reports of hospitals being overwhelmed here, and outside of nursing homes, few American fatalities. So if it is widespread, the reaction is not so bad.
So instead of wringing your hands that this should have been done weeks ago, be grateful that we are in fact catching it in time. Can't win with some of you.
You want to see the hospitals overwhelmed? Are you insane? That’s what we are trying to avoid!
JFC- schools are being closed here before the hospitals are being overwhelmed, you idiot.
Although like someone else said, now instead of hanging out with other kids, many kids will be hanging out with their grandparents instead. But I guess that's what you wanted!
Anonymous wrote:Six weeks school closure where I am in WA state just announced.
Anonymous wrote:Why are there 37 different threads on DCUM right now about closing schools, but very few dedicated to shutting down other businesses/workplaces? Yes, kids can be vectors and contribute to the spread of disease. You know who else can spread it, and die from it at alarmingly higher numbers--adults! Adults who are still riding the metro and going to their workplaces in very high numbers. Sure, some people are working from home, but the vast majority of working adults in this region are still reporting daily to an office.
So why is so much of the vitriol singularly dedicated to the topic of closing just schools?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm not sure if closing schools will stop the spread of this when there is no current case in a school. Plus, when kids are out of school, who will take care of them? parents, baby sitters, elderly grandparents, and who knows who else...and those are the ones who have been expose to others much more frequently than the existing kids at school. Those other adults are the ones you don't know where they have been over the weekend when they are not with your kids. At church, at the theater, hanging out and drinking, smoking with other people.
There was a WHO expert on BBC news saying this today. He said that there doesn't seem to be that much transmission among children in schools (unlike the flu), and when kids are out of school they're hanging around older relatives or else going out places on their own, which is not always good.
I think the reason we're not seeing the transmission in kids is because it isn't affecting them so they may be carrying it but they're not showing symptoms and therefore aren't getting tested. I could be wrong, but I also think saying "kids don't get it so they can't transmit it" is dangerous.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:All MD schools closed for two weeks. No Spring Break
Just announced.
This part is NOT on the MCPS webpage
Anonymous wrote:All MD schools closed for two weeks. No Spring Break
Just announced.
Anonymous wrote:All MD schools closed for two weeks. No Spring Break
Just announced.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm not sure if closing schools will stop the spread of this when there is no current case in a school. Plus, when kids are out of school, who will take care of them? parents, baby sitters, elderly grandparents, and who knows who else...and those are the ones who have been expose to others much more frequently than the existing kids at school. Those other adults are the ones you don't know where they have been over the weekend when they are not with your kids. At church, at the theater, hanging out and drinking, smoking with other people.
There was a WHO expert on BBC news saying this today. He said that there doesn't seem to be that much transmission among children in schools (unlike the flu), and when kids are out of school they're hanging around older relatives or else going out places on their own, which is not always good.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I said a week ago was too early to close schools, but I think now and next week is the right time. There are cases and some local transmission. It’s a good time to start closing things.
I think Fairfax and Arlington will close next week.
I thought a good time was before viruses start to spread widely, based on history and other countries' experience?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I said a week ago was too early to close schools, but I think now and next week is the right time. There are cases and some local transmission. It’s a good time to start closing things.
I think Fairfax and Arlington will close next week.
I thought a good time was before viruses start to spread widely, based on history and other countries' experience?
I'm not convinced it has spread widely yet. When it had spread widely in Italy, the hospitals were overwhelmed. I have not heard any reports of hospitals being overwhelmed here, and outside of nursing homes, few American fatalities. So if it is widespread, the reaction is not so bad.
So instead of wringing your hands that this should have been done weeks ago, be grateful that we are in fact catching it in time. Can't win with some of you.
You want to see the hospitals overwhelmed? Are you insane? That’s what we are trying to avoid!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I said a week ago was too early to close schools, but I think now and next week is the right time. There are cases and some local transmission. It’s a good time to start closing things.
I think Fairfax and Arlington will close next week.
I thought a good time was before viruses start to spread widely, based on history and other countries' experience?
I'm not convinced it has spread widely yet. When it had spread widely in Italy, the hospitals were overwhelmed. I have not heard any reports of hospitals being overwhelmed here, and outside of nursing homes, few American fatalities. So if it is widespread, the reaction is not so bad.
So instead of wringing your hands that this should have been done weeks ago, be grateful that we are in fact catching it in time. Can't win with some of you.
You want to see the hospitals overwhelmed? Are you insane? That’s what we are trying to avoid!