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rzaroch36
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Thu Jul-23-20 11:05 PM

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132. "Republican talking points posted on cdc website"
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Coming to an am radio station near you

Trump/repubs gonna go hard at the school thing. T



https://www.cdc.gov/coronavirus/2019-ncov/community/schools-childcare/reopening-schools.html#fn12

The Importance of Reopening America’s Schools this Fall
Updated July 23, 2020
Languages
As families and policymakers make decisions about their children returning to school, it is important to consider the full spectrum of benefits and risks of both in-person and virtual learning options. Parents are understandably concerned about the safety of their children at school in the wake of COVID-19. The best available evidence indicates if children become infected, they are far less likely to suffer severe symptoms.,, Death rates among school-aged children are much lower than among adults. At the same time, the harms attributed to closed schools on the social, emotional, and behavioral health, economic well-being, and academic achievement of children, in both the short- and long-term, are well-known and significant. Further, the lack of in-person educational options disproportionately harms low-income and minority children and those living with disabilities. These students are far less likely to have access to private instruction and care and far more likely to rely on key school-supported resources like food programs, special education services, counseling, and after-school programs to meet basic developmental needs.

Aside from a child’s home, no other setting has more influence on a child’s health and well-being than their school. The in-person school environment does the following:

provides educational instruction;
supports the development of social and emotional skills;
creates a safe environment for learning;
addresses nutritional needs; and
facilitates physical activity.
This paper discusses each of these critical functions, following a brief summary of current studies regarding COVID-19 and children.

COVID-19 and Children
The best available evidence indicates that COVID-19 poses relatively low risks to school-aged children. Children appear to be at lower risk for contracting COVID-19 compared to adults. To put this in perspective, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), as of July 17, 2020, the United States reported that children and adolescents under 18 years old account for under 7 percent of COVID-19 cases and less than 0.1 percent of COVID-19-related deaths. Although relatively rare, flu-related deaths in children occur every year. From 2004-2005 to 2018-2019, flu-related deaths in children reported to CDC during regular flu seasons ranged from 37 to 187 deaths. During the H1N1pandemic (April 15, 2009 to October 2, 2010), 358 pediatric deaths were reported to CDC. So far in this pandemic, deaths of children are less than in each of the last five flu seasons, with only 64.† Additionally, some children with certain underlying medical conditions, however, are at increased risk of severe illness from COVID-19.*

Scientific studies suggest that COVID-19 transmission among children in schools may be low. International studies that have assessed how readily COVID-19 spreads in schools also reveal low rates of transmission when community transmission is low. Based on current data, the rate of infection among younger school children, and from students to teachers, has been low, especially if proper precautions are followed. There have also been few reports of children being the primary source of COVID-19 transmission among family members.,, This is consistent with data from both virus and antibody testing, suggesting that children are not the primary drivers of COVID-19 spread in schools or in the community.,, No studies are conclusive, but the available evidence provides reason to believe that in-person schooling is in the best interest of students, particularly in the context of appropriate mitigation measures similar to those implemented at essential workplaces.

Educational Instruction
Extended school closure is harmful to children. It can lead to severe learning loss, and the need for in-person instruction is particularly important for students with heightened behavioral needs., Following the wave of school closures in March 2020 due to COVID-19, academic learning slowed for most children and stopped for some. A survey of 477 school districts by the University of Washington’s Center on Reinventing Public Education found that, “far too many schools are leaving learning to chance.” Just one in three school districts expected teachers to provide instruction, track student engagement, or monitor academic progress for all students, and wealthy school districts were twice as likely to have such expectations compared to low-income districts.

We also know that, for many students, long breaks from in-person education are harmful to student learning. For example, the effects of summer breaks from in-person schooling on academic progress, known as “summer slide,” are also well-documented in the literature. According to the Northwest Evaluation Association, in the summer following third grade, students lose nearly 20 percent of their school-year gains in reading and 27 percent of their school-year gains in math. By the summer after seventh grade, students lose on average 39 percent of their school-year gains in reading and 50 percent of their school-year gains in math. This indicates that learning losses are large and become even more severe as a student progresses through school. The prospect of losing several months of schooling, compared to the few weeks of summer vacation, due to school closure likely only makes the learning loss even more severe.

Disparities in educational outcomes caused by school closures are a particular concern for low-income and minority students and students with disabilities. Many low-income families do not have the capacity to facilitate distance learning (e.g. limited or no computer access, limited or no internet access), and may have to rely on school-based services that support their child’s academic success. A study by researchers at Brown and Harvard Universities assessed how 800,000 students used Zearn, an online math program, both before and after schools closed in March 2020. Data showed that through late April, student progress in math decreased by about half, with the negative impact more pronounced in low-income zip codes. Persistent achievement gaps that already existed before COVID-19, such as disparities across income levels and races, can worsen and cause serious, hard-to-repair damage to children’s education outcomes., Finally, remote learning makes absorbing information more difficult for students with disabilities, developmental delays, or other cognitive disabilities. In particular, students who are deaf, hard of hearing, have low vision, are blind, or have other learning disorders (e.g., attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD)) and other physical and mental disabilities have had significant difficulties with remote learning.

Social and Emotional Skill Development
Schools play a critical role in supporting the whole child, not just their academic achievement. In addition to a structure for learning, schools provide a stable and secure environment for developing social skills and peer relationships. Social interaction at school among children in grades PK-12 is particularly important for the development of language, communication, social, emotional, and interpersonal skills.

Extended school closures are harmful to children’s development of social and emotional skills. Important social interactions that facilitate the development of critical social and emotional skills are greatly curtailed or limited when students are not physically in school. In an in-person school environment, children more easily learn how to develop and maintain friendships, how to behave in groups, and how to interact and form relationships with people outside of their family. In school, students are also able to access support systems needed to recognize and manage emotions, set and achieve positive goals, appreciate others’ perspectives, and make responsible decisions. This helps reinforce children’s feelings of school connectedness, or their belief that teachers and other adults at school care about them and their well-being. Such routine in-person contacts provide opportunities to facilitate social-emotional development that are difficult, if not impossible, to replicate through distance learning.,,

Additionally, extended closures can be harmful to children’s mental health and can increase the likelihood that children engage in unhealthy behaviors. An environment where students feel safe and connected, such as a school, is associated with lower levels of depression, thoughts about suicide, social anxiety, and sexual activity, as well as higher levels of self-esteem and more adaptive use of free time , A longitudinal study of 476 adolescents over 3 years starting in the 6th grade found school connectedness to be especially protective for those who had lower connectedness in other areas of their lives, such as home, and to reduce their likelihood of substance use.

Further, a review of studies conducted on pandemics found a strong association between length of quarantine and Post Traumatic Stress Disorder symptoms, avoidance behavior, and anger. Another review published this year found that post-traumatic stress scores of children and parents in quarantine were four times higher than those not quarantined.,

In-person schooling provides children with access to a variety of mental health and social services, including speech language therapy, and physical or occupational therapy to help the physical, psychological, and academic well-being of the child., ,, Further, school counselors are trained in the mental health needs of children and youth and can recognize signs of trauma that primary caregivers are less able to see because they themselves are experiencing the same family stresses. School counselors can then coordinate with teachers to implement interventions to offer children a reassuring environment for regaining the sense of order, security, and normalcy.

Without in-person schooling, many children can lose access to these important services. For example, we know that, even outside the context of school closures, children often do not receive the mental health treatment they need. Among children ages 9-17, it is estimated that 21 percent, or more than 14 million children, experience some type of mental health condition. Yet only 16 percent of those with a condition receive any treatment. Of those, 70-80 percent received such care in a school setting. School closures can be particularly damaging for the 7.4 million American children suffering from a serious emotional disturbance. For those individuals who have a diagnosable mental, behavioral or emotional condition that substantially interferes with or limits their social functioning, schools play an integral role in linking them to care and necessary support services.

For children with intellectual or physical disabilities, nearly all therapies and services are received through schools. These vital services are difficult to provide through distance learning models. As a result, more children with disabilities have received few to no services while schools have been closed.

Safety
Extended school closures deprive children who live in unsafe homes and neighborhoods of an important layer of protection from neglect as well as physical, sexual, and emotional maltreatment and abuse. A 2018 Department of Health and Human Services report found that teachers and other educational staff were responsible for more than one-fifth of all reported child abuse cases—more than any other category of reporter. During the COVID-19 school closures, however, there has been a sharp decline in reports of suspected maltreatment, but tragically a notable increase in evidence of abuse when children are seen for services. For example, the Washington, D.C. Child and Family Services Agency recorded a 62 percent decrease in child abuse reporting calls between mid-March and April 2020 compared to the same time period in 2019, but saw more severe presentation of child abuse cases in emergency rooms. Children who live in a home or neighborhood where neglect, violence, or abuse occur, but who are not physically in school, are deprived of access to trained school professionals who can readily identify the signs of trauma and provide needed support and guidance.,,,,

Nutrition
Extended school closures can be harmful to the nutritional health of children. Schools are essential to meeting the nutritional needs of children with many consuming up to half their daily calories at school. Nationwide more than 30 million children participate in the National School Lunch Program and nearly 15 million participate in the School Breakfast Program., For children from low-income families, school meals are an especially critical source of affordable, healthy foods. While schools have implemented strategies to continue meal services throughout periods of school closures, it is difficult to maintain this type of school nutrition program over the long-term. This is a particularly severe problem for the estimated 11 million food-insecure children, living in the United States.

Physical Activity
When schools are closed, children lose access to important opportunities for physical activity. Many children may not be sufficiently physically active outside of the context of in-school physical education (PE) and other school-based activities. Beyond PE, with schools closed, children may not have sufficient opportunities to participate in organized and safe physical activity. They also lose access to other school-based physical activities, including recess, classroom engagements, and after school programs.

The loss of opportunities for physical activity from school closures, especially when coupled with potentially diminished nutrition, can be particularly harmful to children. Physical inactivity and poor nutrition among children are major risk factors for childhood obesity and other chronic health conditions. Over 75 percent of children and adolescents in the United States do not meet the daily physical activity level recommendations (60 minutes or more), and nearly half exceed 2 hours per day in sedentary behavior. Current models estimate that childhood obesity rate may increase by 2.4 percent if school closures continue to December 2020.,,

Conclusion
Schools are an important part of the infrastructure of our communities, as they provide safe, supportive learning environments for students, employ teachers and other staff, and enable parents, guardians, and caregivers to work. Schools also provide critical services that help meet the needs of children and families, especially those who are disadvantaged, through supporting the development of social and emotional skills, creating a safe environment for learning, identifying and addressing neglect and abuse, fulfilling nutritional needs, and facilitating physical activity. School closure disrupts the delivery of in-person instruction and critical services to children and families, which has negative individual and societal ramifications. The best available evidence from countries that have opened schools indicates that COVID-19 poses low risks to school-aged children, at least in areas with low community transmission, and suggests that children are unlikely to be major drivers of the spread of the virus. Reopening schools creates opportunity to invest in the education, well-being, and future of one of America’s greatest assets—our children—while taking every precaution to protect students, teachers, staff and all their families.

.
*****
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=t5P6zdlPJ34&feature=related
^^^ever walked the streets of...

  

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COVID-19 (Novel Coronavirus) Update (4)... [View all] , CyrenYoung, Sun Jun-28-20 09:41 AM
 
Subject Author Message Date ID
I don't really have shit to say right here, just wanna be first
May 26th 2020
1
Bars here open at 50% June 1st. NYT ranks us 9th in escalating cases
May 27th 2020
2
The school question
May 27th 2020
3
We still have 4.7% of people tested having it
May 27th 2020
4
doesn't that math only work if everyone is tested?
May 27th 2020
5
This math is very, very wrong.
Jun 16th 2020
51
CDC turns in 2.5 page report on COVID-19 Racial Data, Dems pissed (swipe...
May 28th 2020
6
Interesting (very) recent study concerning droplets & ventilation:
May 28th 2020
7
White House/CDC removes guidance about shared cups/choirs at church (Swi...
May 29th 2020
8
Monkeys escape with Coronavirus Samples in Dehli
May 29th 2020
9
Yooooo wtf
May 29th 2020
10
NO.
May 29th 2020
11
I was looking forward to the Trump movie but...
Jun 03rd 2020
16
One in 10 Covid-19 patients with diabetes die within a week, study finds
May 31st 2020
12
I remember reading the article about 1st 100 deaths in Chicago
May 31st 2020
13
Fauci says Trump no longer talks much to him.....
Jun 01st 2020
14
theyre gonna blame every single covid increase on the protests.
Jun 01st 2020
15
Makes you wonder if tear gas was all they were shooting
Jun 03rd 2020
17
COVID post unstickied? It's official...coronavirus is over
Jun 03rd 2020
18
It'll be back.
Jun 03rd 2020
19
      yeah but america is mentally over it
Jun 09th 2020
22
           Yup, I think we're gonna be where we were mid-March in a month
Jun 09th 2020
30
                I was exhausted working from home
Jun 09th 2020
31
Data suggests it's "very rare" for coronavirus to spread through asympto...
Jun 09th 2020
20
asymptomatic just means you have it but you arent actually sick
Jun 09th 2020
21
^^I'm thinking this too but it's worded confusingly - and TESTING
Jun 09th 2020
26
asymptomatic and presymptomatic are two different things
Jun 09th 2020
23
What about Illmatic?
Jun 09th 2020
25
      That means you're born with the sickness in your DNA
Jun 21st 2020
62
Doesn’t this just mean some people don’t feel symptoms
Jun 09th 2020
24
More confusion (Washington Post on this report)
Jun 09th 2020
27
WHO walking that one back
Jun 09th 2020
28
Lmao they walked that all the way back lol.
Jun 09th 2020
29
Just a lil clip of black boy joy and resilience amidst everything going
Jun 10th 2020
32
LOL awesome
Jun 10th 2020
33
WHY IS EVERYTHING RE-OPENING?????????????
Jun 10th 2020
34
Word. I got nothing. We should be doing another round of
Jun 10th 2020
35
Coronavirus was a TV show for the news networks...
Jun 10th 2020
38
Aliens got next...
Jun 11th 2020
43
One other angle I thought of: flattending the curve
Jun 10th 2020
40
      there are other options
Jun 16th 2020
47
Siri play Summertime by DJ Jazzy Jeff and Fresh Prince
Jun 10th 2020
36
basically.
Jun 10th 2020
37
Just remembered Jazzy Jeff had it too
Jun 11th 2020
44
America is giving up on coronavirus
Jun 10th 2020
39
For the same reason we had to shut down in the first place:
Jun 10th 2020
41
      ^^^honestly that's it.
Jun 16th 2020
48
I don't know where else to put this (link)
Jun 11th 2020
42
will counties/cities be allowed to lockdown again?
Jun 12th 2020
45
Took a quick stroll through the mall yesterday.. everyone had a mask...
Jun 16th 2020
50
ilhan omars father died from covid-19.
Jun 16th 2020
46
RIP, thats really sad.. her mom died when she was a baby...
Jun 16th 2020
49
Regal move theatres open July 10.
Jun 16th 2020
52
A COVID-19 vaccine will only work if trials include Black participants.....
Jun 17th 2020
53
Feels surreal that NYC will be on Phase Two
Jun 18th 2020
54
what phase? I prefer pretending barbers don't exist. happy and nappy.
Jun 18th 2020
55
Anyone here play team sports?
Jun 18th 2020
56
Ngl I’m jealous. Our soccer league is cancelled indefinitely
Jun 21st 2020
59
I told them I was out. We'll see how its looking in the fall.
Jun 22nd 2020
64
Someone told me their 3 year old is playing soccer
Jun 21st 2020
60
      Youth sports are about to get back in gear
Jun 21st 2020
61
coronavirus curve pointing *up* again
Jun 19th 2020
57
UPDATE: Wypipo are FUCKING IDIOTS
Jun 21st 2020
58
Texas lifts COVID-19 safety precautions for child care centers
Jun 22nd 2020
63
This makes no sense since Texas is spiking as we speak.
Jun 22nd 2020
66
Apparenly San Diego has cured COVID?
Jun 22nd 2020
65
Has anyone been tested?
Jun 22nd 2020
67
My mother has been tested 3 times
Jun 22nd 2020
68
Yeah my grandma was tested 3 times
Jun 24th 2020
70
tested (false?) negative
Jun 24th 2020
69
I had to get tested prior to surgery last month...
Jul 05th 2020
90
There is no national strategy to control the viral spread
Jun 26th 2020
71
i cant decide if my city is doing a good job or a bad one
Jun 30th 2020
74
we've been close to 300 cases a day most of the past week
Jul 06th 2020
92
We pulled the kid out of daycare until August.
Jun 30th 2020
75
What is your child’s age and how many kids were in the class?
Jun 30th 2020
76
RE: What is your child’s age and how many kids were in the class?
Jun 30th 2020
77
More than 300 children in Texas day cares have caught COVID-19, and the ...
Jul 01st 2020
78
I'm going back into March lockdown mode
Jul 01st 2020
79
We are up to 50,000 cases a day in America, a new record
Jul 02nd 2020
80
So with the WHO insinuating that asymptomatic transmission is rare...
Jul 04th 2020
81
There have been no documented cases of asymptotic transmission (c) who
Jul 04th 2020
82
      I heard there was an election coming up ...
Jul 04th 2020
83
      What’s the point in common folks spreading medical half truths
Jul 04th 2020
85
      Alright then what *has* been documented?
Jul 04th 2020
84
           You shouldn’t post things with certainty you don’t understand
Jul 04th 2020
86
                Ok fair enough, but I actually watched the entire statement from WHO's
Jul 04th 2020
87
                     Their organization has been extremely irresponsible with messaging
Jul 04th 2020
88
White House new official position: We surrender
Jul 04th 2020
89
This needs to be used for eternity against them
Jul 05th 2020
91
seeing some of these videos from this weekend....people are selfish
Jul 06th 2020
93
A few years ago we went to LA and I saw the tar pits
Jul 06th 2020
94
its was always unreasonable to expect folks to sacrifice their summer
Jul 06th 2020
95
By this logic its unreasonable for people to live
Jul 06th 2020
96
I agree. San Diego fucked up by not closing the beaches
Jul 06th 2020
98
      NY invaded Atlanta for some reason this weekend
Jul 06th 2020
101
Well, if they'd have sacrificed their Memorial Day they wouldn't have ha...
Jul 06th 2020
97
you're an imbecile
Jul 06th 2020
99
      nah youre just not dealing w/ reality and the nature of americans
Jul 06th 2020
100
its crazy because I have family and friends on opposite ends of the...
Jul 06th 2020
104
      My Dads side of the fam had a big ass celebration and cook out...
Jul 14th 2020
112
I wish there was a better way to shame folks
Jul 06th 2020
102
Is it me or are people desensitized to the number of deaths so far?
Jul 06th 2020
103
Same with the wars we had
Jul 06th 2020
105
The push to open schools is going to be a tragedy of magnitudes
Jul 08th 2020
106
its like an snl skit became i political party.
Jul 11th 2020
107
California was open for a month. now it's closed again
Jul 13th 2020
108
We should have never re-opened
Jul 13th 2020
109
Joe Rogan is somewhere outraged over this.. AGAIN
Jul 13th 2020
110
      him and all his comedian buddies are such pussies over this.
Jul 13th 2020
111
      Does Joe still feel the same way today as he did..
Jul 14th 2020
114
      American Comedy Club in San Diego has lsot their minds
Jul 14th 2020
113
Data will now be sent to Trump admin first instead of the CDC
Jul 14th 2020
115
He couldn't slow the testing down. So now he'll slow the numbers down
Jul 15th 2020
116
Civil war bout to pop off: Walmart requiring masks nationwide
Jul 15th 2020
117
lol
Jul 15th 2020
118
they need to hire real security. they won't. but they should.
Jul 15th 2020
119
Someone in my group at work got it
Jul 18th 2020
120
Anyone else live in FL
Jul 20th 2020
121
It's a disaster. The numbers are obscene
Jul 20th 2020
122
the largest teachers' union there just filed a suit against DeSantis
Jul 20th 2020
124
Trump is now pro mask *shrug*. As long as it works, I don't even care
Jul 20th 2020
123
the anti-mask thing is one of the weirdest stances to begin with
Jul 20th 2020
125
      Like we won't remember his bullshit like The Alamo
Jul 20th 2020
126
      I was talking to my dad, a retired firefighter, about the anti-mask
Jul 22nd 2020
128
           Yeah i can imagine if we had social media when seatbelt laws hit
Jul 29th 2020
135
everything sucks
Jul 21st 2020
127
I said I didn’t need the stimulus either
Jul 22nd 2020
129
      i would eat and shit that 1200 in seconds
Jul 22nd 2020
131
Alabama is still holding a tech conference in September
Jul 22nd 2020
130
This epidemic seems endless.
Jul 24th 2020
133
theater is deciding to open this friday
Jul 29th 2020
134
45 when asked about 1000 deaths per day - "It is what it is"
Aug 04th 2020
136
He's Marlo
Aug 04th 2020
137
Yea I more or less gave up on one of my lifelong close friends just toda...
Aug 04th 2020
138
      ^^^^ This right here ^^^^
Aug 04th 2020
139
we had 150 Benghazi hearings because 4 americans died
Aug 04th 2020
140
Exactly. 1000 per day. That’s a 9/11 every 3 days.
Aug 04th 2020
141
Y'all should really peep this Axios interview w Agent Orange
Aug 05th 2020
142
more than 25% of all child infections occurred in the last 2 weeks.
Aug 10th 2020
143
RE: COVID-19 (Novel Coronavirus) Update (4)...
Sep 14th 2020
144
end the tyranny
Sep 14th 2020
145
Send them all to fucking Florida and build a wall to keep them there
Sep 14th 2020
146
Good lord. What state was that?
Sep 14th 2020
147
Each day I get more scared of Trump winning
Sep 14th 2020
148
old girl really compared herself
Sep 14th 2020
149
These are the folks BIDEN IS BRAINDEAD propaganda worked on
Sep 14th 2020
150

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