tysker said:
Tbs2003 said:
tysker said:
Quote:
From the available data this seems to be harmless in kids. I'm sure plenty of Chinese kids with asthma caught it but it still seems like it is a bunch of nothing in the young.
Considering that it seems to be less harmful to children, does it really make sense to close schools for extended periods? Maybe close for few days for a deep cleaning and make arrangements for workers over say 50 yrs old. Or is the logic that young people cant be trusted to not touch one another and generally be hygienic? Closing schools already puts pressure on other sectors and services and may even put those others areas at risk.
Basically I'm wondering are schools, especially colleges where people are supposedly smart and informed, don't seem like they're that much prone to spreading this disease than church services, the gym or the grocery store.
It really doesn't matter that the symptoms are mild among younger people. The problem we're trying to avoid is widespread infection, which will happen when it spreads throughout classrooms to parents and beyond. At that point, the elderly will be at risk whenever they go out to get groceries / meds / etc. If we can't stop the spread of the disease (which will likely require dramatic efforts given the apparent transmissibility of the virus), we're going to end up losing a good chunk of our senior population.
Yes but do classrooms have a different transmission rate than your workplace, church, the grocery store, gyms, etc that are not closing? Closing schools and have many of those kids sent to an office with their parents or to be babysat by grandparents doesnt seem like a significantly 'better' solution especially if you're worried about the elderly
You don't have kids, do you? As noted above, kids are germ bombs. If one kid comes down with this, and goes to school before symptoms hit, I'd bet that a high percentage of kids in the school are going to end up with it.
I think there's probably a spectrum of risky places. Anywhere that you're standing / sitting right next to people for long periods of time (church, concerts, sporting events) is probably not the safest place to be. The more spread out people are, the less the risk. It's just common sense based on how they think this bug is spread.