"School
is important for student's academic growth, but it is also important
to their social and mental health. Each family must make decisions on
how to take part in school this fall based on their specific
circumstances, such as spread of COVID-19 in your community, your
work demands, your child's health and academic needs, and health
risk."
– Jeremy
Forster, M.D., a pediatrician at Mayo Clinic Health System
Schools are reopening amid
fears of the spread of COVID-19. Parents are the front line for
protection. And, of course, schools are taking extra precautions to
stop the virus. What is painfully clear is that a united effort will
be the only successful strategy to keep schools open and coronavirus
infection down. Now is the time to guard educational operations.
Parents, guardians, and
caregivers need to check local transmission rates, be sure rapid
access to tests and results are available, and employ means for
“track and trace” for contacts of testing and quarantine.
The website covidactnow.org monitors community transmission using five indicators
or numbers: new cases, infection rate, degree of testing, hospital
capacity and contacts traced. The website also created a warning
system building on an early monitoring system developed by the White
House coronavirus task force.
Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention. July 23, 2020.)
|
– Nipunie
Rajapakse, M.D., pediatric infectious disease specialist at Mayo
Clinic
The
checklist below is
meant as an additional – although not comprehensive – guide for
teachers, parents and administrators.
Masks. Teachers,
staff and school employees should be fitted for KN95 or N95 masks.
These masks block 95 percent of particulate matter when properly
fitted. Students must always wear masks, except when they are eating
or drinking. But teachers and parents need to emphasize the
importance of keeping the mask on and not fidgeting with it. Taking
off and putting on a mask throughout the school day may contaminate
the mask and child.
Air flow. Like in
hospitals, schools should install and use HEPA filters. Ideally,
schools should keep windows and door open, letting fresh air reduce
the concentration of indoor contaminants, such as virus particles.
High-efficiency particulate air (HEPA) filters work in a similar way,
but won’t create problems for children with allergies or asthma.
Removing viruses from the air reduces the potential for exposure.
Pods. Students
should be divided into groups or pods of 10 to 15 students. The pod
learns, eats and exercises together the entire school day. This way
each student can stay 6 feet from their peers while seated at their
desk. A pod also helps identify and contain a potential outbreak.
Drinking fountains.
Schools must replace water fountains with bottled water. Using a
water fountain brings hands, mouths and noses close to a high traffic
surface. A student infected with COVID-19 may shed the virus on the
on/off knob, water source and other parts of the fountain. Closing a
fountain eliminates a potential source of contamination.
Hand Washing. Schools
should promote and demonstrate regular hand washing and positive
hygiene behaviors and monitor their uptake. Ensure adequate, clean
and separate toilets for girls and boys. (Post signs encouraging good
hand and respiratory hygiene practices.)
Outdoor education.
Students should eat and exercise outdoors as much as possible.
Intense activities require more inhales and exhales. This can
increase the number of virus droplets in the air, leading to greater
exposure to COVID-19. Conducting both activities outside allows fresh
air to reduce the concentration of viruses.
Movement. Hallways
are one-way corridors, moving students in one direction. One-way
hallways reduce the chances of face-to-face contact, which increases
the likelihood of transmission.
Cleaning.
Classrooms and buses are cleaned twice a day. Depending upon the
surface, COVID-19 can live on surfaces for hours to days. Cleaning is
necessary to destroy the virus in common space surfaces, such as
bathrooms, lockers and buses.
Testing. Schools
must be vigilant. Surveillance systems should be set up to
periodically test sewage, heating air conditioning and ventilation
systems and compressors to help in the early detection of an
outbreak.
Extracurriculars.
School should stop chorus, band, wrestling, football and other
contact sports. Social distancing is impossible with these group
activities. Singing and playing wind instruments aerosolize the
virus. A two-hour choir practice with one symptomatic singer in
Washington state resulted in 87 percent of the group becoming
infected.
Students at higher
risk. While COVID-19 school policies can reduce risk, they will
not prevent it. Some students with high-risk medical conditions may
need other accommodations. Talk with your pediatrician and school
staff (including school nurses) to see if your child needs additional
solutions to help ensure safety at school.
(Dr. Valda Crowder.
“Back to school? COVID-19 advice for American parents and teachers
amid a pandemic.” NBC Think. August 24, 2020.)
So much needs to happen so
that students can learn and thrive without raising the risk of
spreading COVID. The goal of having children attend school in person
will only be safe when a community has the spread of the virus under
control. And then, a layered approach is needed to keep students,
teachers and staff safe. But this will only be possible if intense
cleaning, social distancing and testing protocols are carried out.
And if an outbreak does occur or rates begin to rise again, schools
may have to close again
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