Yeah agreed if it’s a close contact situation the siblings are free to go to school once the close contact is symptom free.
in the case I was describing my son had a cough wasn’t a close contact so was sent for a test therefore his unvaccinated sister had to restrict movements too. Different scenarios
Possibly but they wouldn’t have been in the 48hr before the test…so in my head if it was my house the unvaccinated child would be off school…. I’m going to forget I was told it and mind my own beeswax…
Child isn’t vaccinated …. But you know I think the waters are so muddied by confusing govt messages regarding primary aged children that the parents may not realise they are doing wrong.
ive heard people say several times that the rules don’t apply to primary kids. people are genuinely confused.
Absolutely, I am one myself.My own instinct is keep them all at home for the duration, infact we are currently awauting a test result and mine are all in (even though I think my husband and I can go out as we are vaccinated and well) .But even now I am aware of one family where a small child brought in covid, they all isolated, mam caught it end of week one, original child could back to preschool end of week 2, sister also caught it end of week 2, so another week at home while child 1 is back at school, yet child 2 missed 2 weeks of school unnecessarily before actually catching it....it is all very unclear tbh.Child 2 could have gone back at 10 days in with a negative PCR, but the mam caught it so...she had to stay home longer....yet child 1 was able to go back within that time frame once his symptoms cleared and he had a negative test.
I’m so confused and there’s a long winter there yet 😳😳
All I actually know is that it is a gigantic pain in the a$$ to manage when you have a couple of prinary age kids.
They only go back 24 hours before the test if the person hasn't had any symptoms. It's 48 hours before symptoms started though if the person had symptoms.
In my daughters case the school told us that she had been a close contact and we arranged a test for her then, by the time the contact tracers phoned me it was day 8 since she had been a close contact....so someone could be classed as a close contact but then not get tested until days later....and their close contacts are counted from when they got the test, not when they were told they were a CC, so the parent may well have isolated in the 24 hours before the test.
Personally I wouldn't have sent my child to school either, but the parent may not be doing anything wrong 'technically'.
Would I be correct in assuming that masks and social distancing will be gone from school as of next Friday too under current plans?
No. All current measures are to stay in place in schools until Christmas.
Do you have a link to that announcement by any chance?
All schools were sent a Circular by the Dept of Ed in August to say that Covid measures were to stay the same in schools this school year 21/22. There’s been some other contact since that basically said, definitely until Christmas, we’ll be in touch. Circular below;
id say thats why they might be serially disruptive, because there never a sanction. The child is 15 and she admitted to it when questioned. Only got a day suspension but thats a very serious offence imo, tampering with the school facilities its basically vandalism because a lot of class time was lost turning off the alarm. same as touching a fire extinguisher.Definite suspension and next stop for someone on that would be out the gate for good. Cant handle pandering to bold kids in a school.
Jesus reading about this type of thing is awful. Hope all involvd are ok and that it isn't a situation that is replicated elsewhere in the country. Really feel for the principal, awful situation.
The kids are kids and the teachers are vaccinated. Of course all are almost certainly ok
but they mightn't be all ok and there are such simple mitigation factors the Department could be employing to help keep them safe. It baffles me that they won't outfit every classroom in the country with HEPA filters. Cost is miniscule compared to testing etc.
Very hard to understand the attitude towards schools. Yes keep them open of course, but also contact trace and isolate as required. And as you say, put things in place that could actualy help keep them open. That said, I hope this is an isolated incident.
Not a mention of anyone being sick, i think some people can't see the woods for the trees if this is regarded as awful, it's an overreaction and won't age well.
Still no co2 monitors as promised.
My child caught a respritory infection in school last year. It wasnt covid. She was hospitalised for almost a week. Dont see the department employing factors to keep other illnesses away. Ever. My child wasnt ok, hooked up to machines, ECG, chest xray, nebulisers and oxygen. Id put it out there that none of the kids from this school end up as bad as my child who had a chest infection and not covid. Ireland is facing into a PTSD pandemic
personally I think it very obvious that they are letting it rip through schools in the hope of herd immunity for under 12s
But the point is the Department should be putting in HEPA filtration regardless of Covid, it mitigates hugely against all respiratory illnesses, hugely reduces absenteeism, aids concentration etc. It could have helped your child last year.
It's a just a no brainer, really, but would have the added benefit of reducing covid transmission. I mean, why not?
You got a cost for that, even off the top of your head? Also how long would such a project take?
I do think it's awful that although the school followed the guidelines provided that Covid still spread and I also think it is awful that they had to take the difficult decision to close. That's hardly a controversial opinion to hold.
Theoretically, it would take days. These are plug and play units, no need for installation or construction.
Decent HEPA filter can be got for €300. Our own school has 16 classrooms, so could be done just under 5000. I don't know current figures, but I think for 2018/19 there were 3,240 primary schools, but assuming they're all double stream schools (some will be one, some will be more) that's an investment of €15.5m nationally. A drop in the water compared to what's being pumped into testing/hospitalisation etc. Also, the Department currently advises that schools can invest in these if they wish, and has suggestions for schools, but just not the will to actually do it.
If the state were negotiating do bulk order thousands of units, I'm sure they could get them for substantially cheaper too. Ideally, they would be really investing in proper mechanical ventilation systems and retrofitting, but you're looking at thousands per unit in that case, so unlikely.
HEPA filters are not a magic wand, and need to be used in combination with open windows/monitors etc., but they're a big part of the puzzle that can help to reduce all airborne infections in a classroom. Useless against nits though ;)
Are people genuinely not aware of the supply issues with electrical components in general and this type of equipment in particular. Sure there are 50,000 HEPA filter units sitting in a warehouse just waiting to be installed.
We already know that the reason the CO2 monitors are not available was a manufacturing fault.
How is that not a reason to order them? Even if they're delayed, they'll come, and they'll be worth it.
Besides which, HEPA filters are a mass market commercial and residential product, there could easily be hundreds of thousands of them waiting in warehouses just waiting to be installed.
Do you have some in stock?
There are no doubt millions of hepa filters siting in warehouses. They are useless with out the systems in which to use them however, and to believe sourcing 50,000 of the heap filtration systems is a trivial matter is naive in the extreme.
I meant the full units. The Department of Health in Victoria has negotiated with Samsung to supply 51,000 air purifiers to be rolled out to their schools over the next four months. Samsung are one amongst many who would happily enter negotiations with the Irish government. It's entirely doable.
Victoria are paying $125m AUS for 51,000 units, roughly €80m.
https://www.abc.net.au/radio/centralcoast/programs/breakfast/hepa-filters-in-schools/13554852
So your cost estimate would appear to be understated by a factor of at least 5 ?