Friday, October 9, 2020

You can come out of your basements now... the "All Clear" is finally sounding...

 


Schools Aren't Super-Spreaders

These numbers are not zero, which for some people means the numbers are not good enough. But zero was never a realistic expectation. We know that children can get COVID-19, even if they do tend to have less serious cases. Even if there were no spread in schools, we’d see some cases, because students and teachers can contract the disease off campus. But the numbers are small—smaller than what many had forecasted.

Predictions about school openings hurting the broader community seem to have been overblown as well. In places such as Florida, preliminary data haven’t shown big community spikes as a result of school openings. Rates in Georgia have continued to decline over the past month. And although absence of evidence is not evidence of absence, I’ve read many stories about outbreaks at universities, and vanishingly few about outbreaks at the K–12 level.

One might argue, again, that any risk is too great, and that schools must be completely safe before local governments move to reopen them. But this approach ignores the enormous costs to children from closed schools. The spring interruption of schooling already resulted in learning losses; Alec MacGillis’s haunting piece in The New Yorker and ProPublica highlights the plight of one child unable to attend school in one location, but it’s a marker for more. The children affected by school closures are disproportionately low-income students of color. Schools are already unequal; the unequal closures make them more so. Virtual school is available, but attendance levels are not up to par. Pediatricians have linked remote schooling to toxic stress.

Parents are struggling as well, not just children. Cities have recognized the need for child care for parents who cannot afford to quit their jobs to supervise their kids, but this has led to a haphazard network of options. Houston, for example, has opened some schools as learning centers. L.A. has learning centers set up for low-income students in alternative locations. These spur the questions: If school isn’t safe for everyone, why is it safe for low-income students? And if school is safe for low-income students, why isn’t it safe for everyone?

Democratic governors who love to flaunt their pro-science bona fides in comparison with the anti-science Trump administration don’t seem to be aware of this growing body of evidence. On Monday, for instance, New York Governor Andrew Cuomo claimed that businesses were not “mass spreaders,” as opposed to schools, and subsequently announced that he would close schools in hot-spot areas.

Where can the country go from here? From my end, we are going to continue to collect data through our dashboard, to try to better understand the patterns we are seeing and what correlates with “safe” reopenings. I hope that more schools and districts will see these data, and others, and perhaps start to think about how reopening might work. We do not want to be cavalier or put people at risk. But by not opening, we are putting people at risk, too.

25 comments:

  1. COVID-19 cases rising among US children as schools reopen. 9/29/2020 (excerpt) After preying heavily on the elderly in the spring, the coronavirus is increasingly infecting American children and teens in a trend authorities say appears fueled by school reopenings and the resumption of sports, playdates and other activities. Children of all ages now make up 10% of all U.S cases, up from 2% in April, the American Academy of Pediatrics reported Tuesday. [end excerpt]

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  2. They must be dying in droves then. How many children died this week? Let me give you a hint... there have been less than 100 so-called Covid deaths of people aged 0-17 years old in the USA to date.

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  3. So... who cares then? Maybe the parents of the 100 under-18 year old victims, but nobody else?What about people who died after being infected by a child who caught it in school (teachers, other school workers, family members, others they came in contact with)? Will you claim nobody has? Or that the number of deaths is small so who cares?

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  4. The flu, another contagious respiratory illness, killed an estimated 477 people under 17 years old in the 2018 – 2019 season, according to the CDC. From 2010 to the end of the 2019 flu season, the CDC said the illness killed an average of 511 children each year.

    Why didn't we close the schools ages ago? Deaths of school kids from influenza is 5x Covid.

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  5. Children's role in spread of virus bigger than thought. (excerpt) In the most comprehensive study of COVID-19 pediatric patients to date, researchers provide critical data showing that children play a larger role in the community spread of COVID-19 than previously thought.

    ...as asymptomatic carriers or carriers with few symptoms attending school, they can spread infection and bring the virus into their homes. This is a particular concern for families in certain socio-economic groups, which have been harder hit in the pandemic, and multi-generational families with vulnerable older adults in the same household. In the MGHfC study, 51 percent of children with acute SARS-CoV-2 infection came from low-income communities compared to 2 percent from high-income communities. [end excerpt]

    Still waiting for it to be declared to be officially over, btw. Which was your prediction some time ago. LOL.

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  6. Your "waves" are diminishing into statistically insignificant "ripples".

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  7. BBC News, 10/8/2020: In recent weeks, infections have risen steadily, with national cases increasing for three weeks in a row. Though numbers have so far not reached the record-breaking levels of July and August, the country is reporting more than 40,000 new cases each day.

    Hospitalisations, too, are on the rise. According to data compiled by the Covid Tracking Project, the average number of people hospitalised for coronavirus in a week rose recently for the first time since July. ... One contributing factor has been the return to school for US students. [end excerpt]

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  8. Are hospitals overwhelmed yet? Why don't you re open the Javitz Center... LOL!

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  9. When is the CDC going to officially declare that the pandemic has ended?

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  10. When it stops revising it's excess deaths to just barely over the threshold for a pandemic. Officially, the numbers this week are way below the threshold.

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  11. It's like the global warming nuts who keep adjusting the
    official" temperature data in the past "down" to prove warming in the present..

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  12. If it's a conspiracy, why is the historical data being adjusted? Shouldn't the temperature record remain the same year to year w/o adjustment?

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  13. Tony Heller is a liar or doesn't know wtf he's talking about :P

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  14. btw - You'll note that Heller's debunker fails to address the temperature data adjustments by NOAA... I wonder why... lol!

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  15. Because that is the one fact Heller isn't trying to mislead people like you about... is what I'm guessing the reason isn't.

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  16. And that is what makes it the reason why APG is a HOAX. MOAA is adjusting surface temperature data to match atmospheric CO2 data.

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  17. Liars suspect everyone else of lying. That is why you believe nutty conspiracy theories like "climate change is a hoax".

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  18. What would the purpose of this "hoax" be? To spend trillions of dollars on ineffective and inefficient wind turbines and solar cells to the benefit of "Green Energy" investors like Al Gore?

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