Right-wing National Public Radio questioned whether schools should remain closed during the Covid-19 pandemic. Several recent studies concluded the opening of schools did not worsen the pandemic. NPR reported:
Despite widespread concerns, two new international studies show no consistent relationship between in-person K-12 schooling and the spread of the coronavirus. And a third study from the United States shows no elevated risk to childcare workers who stayed on the job.
Combined with anecdotal reports from a number of U.S. states where schools are open, as well as a crowdsourced dashboard of around 2,000 U.S. schools, some medical experts are saying it's time to shift the discussion from the risks of opening K-12 schools to the risks of keeping them closed.
"As a pediatrician, I am really seeing the negative impacts of these school closures on children," Dr. Danielle Dooley, a medical director at Children's National Hospital in Washington, D.C., told NPR. She ticked off mental health problems, hunger, obesity due to inactivity, missing routine medical care and the risk of child abuse — on top of the loss of education. "Going to school is really vital for children. They get their meals in school, their physical activity, their health care, their education, of course."
Hmmm.... I haven't read any of this in the local media. But, but, but what about the second wave?
Enric Álvarez at the Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya looked at different regions within Spain for his recent co-authored working paper. Spain's second wave of coronavirus cases started before the school year began in September. Still, cases in one region dropped three weeks after schools reopened, while others continued rising at the same rate as before, and one stayed flat.
Nowhere, the research found, was there a spike that coincided with reopening: "What we found is that the school [being opened] makes absolutely no difference," Álvarez told NPR.
Spain does extensive contact tracing, so Álvarez was also able to analyze how much schools are contributing to the spread of the coronavirus. Álvarez said his research suggests the answer is: not much. He found that, for all the students and staff who tested positive, 87% of them did not infect anyone else at the school. They were single cases.
"We are not sure that the environments of the schools may not have a small and systematic effect," said Álvarez, "But it's pretty clear that they don't have very major epidemic-changing effects, at least in Spain, with the measures that are being taken in Spain."
These safety measures include mask-wearing for all children older than 6, ventilation, keeping students in small groups or "bubbles," and social distancing of 1.5 meters — slightly less than the recommended 6 feet in the United States. When a case is detected, the entire "bubble" is sent home for quarantine.
What about other countries?
Insights for Education is a foundation that advises education ministries around the globe. For their report, which was not peer reviewed, they analyzed school reopening dates and coronavirus trends from February through the end of September across 191 countries.
"There is no consistent pattern," said Dr. Randa Grob-Zakhary, who heads the organization. "It's not that closing schools leads to a decrease in cases, or that opening schools leads to a surge in cases."
Some countries, such as Thailand and South Africa, fully opened when cases were low, with no apparent impact on transmission. Others, such as Vietnam and Gambia, had cases rising during summer break, yet those rates actually dropped after schools reopened. Japan, too, saw cases rise, and then fall again, all while schools were fully reopened. But the United Kingdom saw a strong upward trend that started around the time of reopening schools.
"We're not saying at all that schools have nothing to do with cases," Grob-Zakhary said. What the data suggests instead is that opening schools does not inevitably lead to increased case numbers.
But what about America? It's only The States that counts, after all.
On Oct. 14, the Infectious Diseases Society of America gave a briefing on safe school reopenings. Bottom line? "The data so far are not indicating that schools are a superspreader site," said Dr. Preeti Malani, an infectious disease specialist at the University of Michigan's medical school.
One place in the U.S. where systematic data gathering is happening — Utah — seems to echo the conclusions drawn by the new international studies. Utah's state COVID-19 database clearly reports school-associated cases by district. And while coronavirus spread is relatively high in the state, State Superintendent of Public Instruction Sydnee Dickson believes that schools are not, for the most part, driving spread.
"Where you see cases on the rise in a neighborhood, in a county, we see that tend to be reflected in a school," Dickson said. "[But] we're not seeing spread by virtue of being in school together."
Tom Hudachko of the state's health department said that after both colleges and schools reopened in early September, there was a rise in cases among the 15-24 age group. But with targeted public health messaging those cases have started to come down.
For the most part, Hudachko said, K-12 school clusters have been concentrated at high schools. "We have had some outbreaks in middle schools. They've been far less frequent. And elementary school numbers seem to be one-offs here and there."....
A Yale study reviewed Covid-19 cases among child-care workers.
A recent study from Yale University could potentially shed some light on these questions. It tracked 57,000 childcare workers, located in all 50 states, Washington, D.C., and Puerto Rico, for the first three months of the pandemic in the United States. About half continued caring for very young children, such as the children of essential workers, while the other half stayed home. The study found no difference in the rate of coronavirus infections between the two groups, after accounting for demographic factors.
Conclusion?
"Children under the age of 10 generally are at quite low risk of acquiring symptomatic disease," from the coronavirus, said Dr. Rainu Kaushal of Weill Cornell Medicine. And they rarely transmit it either. It's a happy coincidence, Kaushal and others said, that the youngest children face lower risk and are also the ones who have the hardest time with virtual learning.
"I would like to see the students, especially the younger students, get back," said Malani at the University of Michigan. "I feel more encouraged that that can happen in a safe and thoughtful way."
Kingfish note: Open the schools back up. The kids who really need to be in school are forced to stay at home because their school districts won't reopen. Only one, just one, child has died in Mississippi from Covid-19 this year. We lose that many children due to the flu every year. Only 99 children have been hospitalized out of 6,380 hospitalizations, 1.55%. The 99 hospitalized children are 0.08% of the 115,088 cases reported in Mississippi.
16 comments:
When your leftist, commie scam gets doubted by NPR....game over
My daughter has it right now. She wears her dumbass mask religiously, she had a fever for an hour, coughed about 10 times over 2 days, ate some doughnuts and now she’s fine. Wife, me, no covid
NPR = National Pravda Radio
Just state media preparing the way for all schools to open once the election is over so it is not quite as obvious what the Dem's and unions have done.
"Right-wing NPR" - isn't that what's called an oxymoron?
@4:29 I think its called sarcasm.
@4:29,
I haven't listened to NPR in many years. Then it was only for a few seconds at a time while scanning channels on the car radio for something decent to listen. Back then NPR had nothing right wing about it. I doubt it has changed for the better in the last few years. To answer your question, yes, "Right-wing NPR" - isn't that what's called an oxymoron? you are correct. If I have missed the transformation to the right someone please let me know and I'll give it a listen.
P.S. Satellite radio is a wonderful thing for us folks traveling from market to market. Just too damn expensive!
Stick to the subject of the post. I get the NPR hate but stick to the subject.
Schools should be opened as long as they can maintain distancing between the kids and teachers. Keep the kids in one classroom to avoid crowded hallways. In-person learning can be done relatively safely.
Unfortunately here in Mississippi nobody cares about education. It's all about sports, and those need to be tabled until the virus is controlled. There have been numerous instances of players spreading it among themselves with games cancelled every week across the state. Sports cannot be done safely.
@8:31 really? They have been doing "sports" safely and children have been attending school safely for weeks now.
Yeah, cancel sports such as cross country, track, tennis, golf, and swimming that don't require close physical contact.
Frankly, the football season has gone better than expected. There have been cases and outbreaks in high school football but not at catastrophic levels.
This is a disease that preys on fatties. SO yeah, lets close all gyms and ban all sports or other activities that might help people stay in shape and avoid the worst ravages of this disease. You know, I asked Dr. Dobbs at a presser two weeks ago why the state and the Health Department wasn't pushing an anti-obesity message to fight the virus. He said it would take too long. Oooook.
By the way, how many athletes in high school sports have wound up in the hospital due to catching C19 at practice or a sporting event? We know none have died in Mississippi. How many wound up in the hospital?
We can't send the children back to school. We have to protect mamaw and pawpaw and the old lady teachers!!
Kingfish, thank you for bringing up the obesity issue. USA obesity rate is why you cant compare are handling of the virus with say South Korea
Now that it's affecting more white folks than Black folks we will be hearing more about this.
@3:45 I need to correct you.. you mean “White” folks right? I want it capitalized...
"Right-wing NPR?" WTF? Oxymoron.
Post a Comment