Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is assuming your nanny is willing to take the vaccine, which is another question entirely.
NP here. I would fire any nanny who refused.
Anonymous wrote:Well, I do need to worry about it because we are deciding whether we want to go the nanny route or the daycare route. Have to apply to daycares now because of waitlists (due in May).
Anonymous wrote:This is assuming your nanny is willing to take the vaccine, which is another question entirely.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think nannies will be offered the vaccine with teachers however using when the teacher vs nanny will be vaccinated makes no sense since none of the other kids in daycare will be vaccinated and could easily pass the virus on to your child. Or the other parents. Or the maintenance staff. Or the daycare kids older siblings.
Plus the vaccine is not a guarantee that a vaccinated person can’t pass the virus onto others - just that the vaccinated person will be asymptomatic.
I’d put a far greater trust in one nanny with a commitment to be safe than a room full of kids and teachers.
+1. Even after the vaccine, limiting exposure to people is still the only way until our kids can be vaccinated. A nanny is the better bet.
Anonymous wrote:I think nannies will be offered the vaccine with teachers however using when the teacher vs nanny will be vaccinated makes no sense since none of the other kids in daycare will be vaccinated and could easily pass the virus on to your child. Or the other parents. Or the maintenance staff. Or the daycare kids older siblings.
Plus the vaccine is not a guarantee that a vaccinated person can’t pass the virus onto others - just that the vaccinated person will be asymptomatic.
I’d put a far greater trust in one nanny with a commitment to be safe than a room full of kids and teachers.
Anonymous wrote:Very very low.