A director's order will
require Ohio schools to establish a reporting mechanism for parents, schools, and health departments to report COVID-19.
September 8 –
Positive Tests
Beginning on September 8,
parents, guardians, and school staff “are encouraged” to notify
their school within 24 hours of receiving a positive test or a
clinical diagnosis.
Schools then have 24 hours
to notify parents or guardians about the case in writing. Governor
DeWine said they should provide as much information as possible
without releasing protected health information.
Within 24 hours of
learning of a student, teacher, staff member or coach with COVID-19,
schools must:
- Notify parents whose children shared the same classroom space or participated in an activity with that person,
- Notify the entire school community of a case, through email, the school website or another form of written communication and
- Report the case to the local health department within 24 hours.
(Jarrod Clay. “Ohio
schools must report COVID-19 cases starting September 8, Gov. DeWine
says.” ABC 6 Columbus. September 03. 2020.)
“We understand there is
a balance between privacy and transparency,” the governor said.
“Again, we do not intend for protected health information to be
released in our effort to provide information to Ohioans so they can
make the right decisions for their family.”
September
15 – Health Department Reports
Beginning September 15,
local health departments will report the number of newly reported and
cumulative cases to the state health department every Tuesday. New
data will then be published publicly every Thursday on Ohio’s
coronavirus tracking website, the governor said.
That report will list the
weekly and cumulative number of cases, broken down by students and
staff, by school district or by school if not associated with a
school district.
In addition, DeWine said
each school district or school will identify a COVID-19 coordinator
to facilitate the reporting of case information. Each school and
building also will be required to provide the local health department
with a copy of its pandemic plan upon request.
Some central Ohio
districts, such as Worthington, have begun publicly reporting cases
on their websites.
Dewine said …
“Just
because a school has positive cases among students and staff does not
mean that school did anything wrong. In fact, if there are cases, and
they’re reporting them, they’re doing what they should be doing.
Schools cannot control what happens out in their local community.”
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