Does that mean we’re back at school without respecting a safe point of safety? No, of course, precautions must be taken, however, we cannot act alone because the coronavirus is there, our schools are now possible prospects for the spread of this thing. First of all, they’re not. Secondly, I’m tired of other people not thinking that airports, bars, restaurants and other places where, you know, other people meet, were never places where one could be in poor health before the pandemic erupted. It’s possible he’s still got something from those put. Ask yourself, before COVID, did you think the places you ate erased those menus and how many people see that they don’t wash their hands after going to the bathroom? You’d be about to think if they did it before all this hysteria. And yes, it’s hysteria, fueled through the liberal media that sell panic pornography at all costs. That’s the point at which you can’t accept as true with numbers, as you’ve noticed with COVID positivity instances in Florida. Some verification sites do not report negative effects and when they do, it locates that 98% positivity rates, such as those from Orlando Health, fall to … 9,4%. Yes, you don’t think it’s wrong with the numbers. There’s a lot of wonderful things going on. So stay alert and move on to the numbers after a few days. And please, you know because you’re all smart patriots, DO NOTHING but MSNBC or CNN distributions on this.
If you need to see a boomerang hit MSNBC in the face, don’t take a look at the handful of pediatricians who said it was time to reopen the schools. It is very likely that some manufacturers will think that these doctors would agree with the liberal line of means to avoid schools at all prices in the fall. No (via NBC News) [I’m the one pointing out]:
Evidence suggests that young people are not as sensitive as adults to COVID-19, the disease caused by coronavirus. Even among those who have been infected, it is rare for young people to develop severe headaches or require hospitalization.
But this does not mean that study rooms can be free from social estrangement and other protective precautions, especially if schools intend to welcome young people in less than two months.
“It shouldn’t be about children returning to school, but about children returning to school safely,” said Dr. Jennifer Lighter, a pediatric infectious disease specialist at NYU Langone Health in New York.
Having young people physically provided in schools in the fall as much as imaginable would be an “ideal situation,” Lighter said, but schools will want to put policies in place that allow academics to maintain some internal distance and avoid close contact for long periods of time. . This can come by simply reducing the size of elegance, rearranging offices to make sure young people aren’t grouped or face-to-face, and moving the elegance of gymnastics or other outdoor recreational activities, he said.
In the United States, young people make up about 22% of the population, however, young people account for 2% of coronavirus instances to date, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
The University of Vermont has also torpedoed the narrative that young people are potential targets for infection and spread of this virus. It turns out that young people don’t perceive or spread it. The adults they’re with, however, is a problem. The Wall Street Journal’s editorial board is equally expressive about President Trump’s call to reopen schools: scientific, economic, and health-related knowledge means that our youth will return to school in the fall (via WSJ) [I’m pointing out]:
Start with young people’s relative immunity to the disease, which reassures parents.
According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 30 young people under the age of 15 died from Covid-19. In a typical year, 190 young people die of the flu, 436 suicide, 625 murder and 4,114 of unintentional deaths such as drowning.
Only two young men under the age of 18 were killed in Chicago, fewer than those who were killed in shootings on a recent weekend. In New York, 0.03% of young people under the age of 18 were hospitalized by Covid and 7.5 out of a million died. The mortality rate for over-75s is more than 2,200 times higher than for children under the age of 18.
So far, young people have been from the virus compared to running adults. But even patients with pediatric cancer at Memorial Sloan Kettering in New York were about a third less likely to have a positive result than their adult caregivers, and only one of the 20 patients who tested positive received non-critical hospital care needed. In Sweden, which has kept schools open, only 20 young people under the age of 19, 0.6% of the cases shown, have been admitted to intensive care and only one has died.
Parents and teachers naturally worry that young people will spread the virus. But a recent retrospective examination of schools in northern France, which began in February before the close, revealed that “despite the 3 introductions of the virus in the 3 number one schools, there does not appear to have been any more transmission of the virus to other pupils or teachers and non-teachers, school staff. »
Teenagers seem to be more contagious. However, schools that have reopened in peak countries, adding Germany, Singapore, Norway, Denmark and Finland, have experienced an epidemic. Some schools in Israel experienced epidemics last month after elegance sizes increased, but maximum infections between teachers and academics were benign.
In any case, those dangers can be controlled as Trump’s leadership has advised on his school boards: offices are six feet apart, shifting school periods, forcing young people to cover their faces where possible, keeping them in the same cohort and feeding them. play and be informed as much as possible outdoors. Teachers can also wear face protectors, and schools can use plastic barriers in top-level study rooms to separate them from young people.
[…]
Teachers’ unions have fought for accountability. The United Teachers Los Angeles collective pandemic prohibited schools from requiring online face-to-face courses such as Zoom or Skype. Teachers also don’t have to paint more than 4 hours a day.
Philadelphia Superintendent William Hite warned that young people were falling through the cracks, which could foreshadow an increase in youth crime and crime. The NWEA study team projected that “students will likely return in the fall of 2020 with approximately 63 to 68% of reading learning gains compared to a typical school year and 37 to 50% of math learning gains. Another part of the year or year of lost training will be catching up.
Achievement gaps will increase. Wealthy families can integrate and follow their children’s virtual education as they run from home. But how can a freshman whose parents don’t have that luxury be informed practically by himself?
It’s clear that keeping our kids out of school does more harm than good. In fact, a total elegance of young people who are behind and unprepared for schooling can lead to a more damaging socioeconomic scenario in the years to come than this small virus.