Double Diamond said:
So just let things rage?
It would rage, mask or no mask.
Besides, Texas Supreme Court just sided with Abbott to ban mask mandates.
Double Diamond said:
So just let things rage?
Quote:
Conclusions Implementing, adhering to and evaluating COVID-19 mitigation guidelines is challenging in primary school settings. Our findings suggest that reducing non-household direct contacts lowers infection rates. There was no evidence that face coverings, 2-metre social distancing or stopping children mixing was associated with lower odds of COVID-19 or cold infection rates in the school. Primary school staff found teaching challenging during COVID-19 restrictions, especially for younger learners and those with additional learning needs.
Cases in Japan are up 1,516% in two months, but sure CDC, masks can stop cases in two weeks pic.twitter.com/pbC75xW3mM
— IM (@ianmSC) August 28, 2021
hey sea speed, it's tough to tell, do you think masks should be worn by school children?Sea Speed said:
BuT mUh DeLtA
Hence why I am against mandates. Granted, this is another example of a terrible CDC answer where too much seems to lean towards the absolute dragging of heals before a mandate would be removed. A better answer would be something to the effect of, "look, I hate wearing a mask in public as much as the next guy and understand those opposed to it, but I see the need to wear one FOR THE IMMEDIATE future and within a few days to weeks of the spike dropping enough to be comfortable, discussing and even completely removing the mask mandate for places that are not in high risk. We do not intend to push masking any longer than we'd have to"Quote:Quote:
When asked when kids can remove masks in school, CDC director Rochelle Walensky said, "If our children are vaccinated, we have full vaccination in schools, we have full vaccination in teachers, we have disease rates that are low I think then we can start thinking about how we can loosen up."
Conspicuous by their absence:
— Harry Thomas (@DrHarryThomas) August 30, 2021
-Houston (@HoustonISD),
-Dallas (@dallasschools), and
-Austin (@AustinISD)… https://t.co/prLJA1Uzyb
gunan01 said:
That's ironic since you agreed with nortex97's post on this page, and your "correlation does not equal causation" statement is much more applicable to that set of data from Japan
gunan01 said:
Do you see less infections in places with mask mandates?
I just pulled up the data. For Dallas ISD, 164 of 236 campuses that did not report at all and the data for another 17 has been suppressed. Not reported zero, did not report anything (blanks in the Excel document). Of those, I personally know that cases amongst both students and staff existed in at least two of them (Bryan Adams High School and J.L. Long Middle School). I then picked Corpus Christi ISD at random from this list and totaled the number of "New Student Cases" to check the math. The tweet says 851, the data says 60. In fact, the grand total for all cases in the data is 120 - including both students and staff. The 851 number is listed in the row "Corpus Christi ISD Total."gunan01 said:
Might not be so "worthless" after all. Three of the state's biggest ISDs have mask mandates yet aren't on this list.Conspicuous by their absence:
— Harry Thomas (@DrHarryThomas) August 30, 2021
-Houston (@HoustonISD),
-Dallas (@dallasschools), and
-Austin (@AustinISD)… https://t.co/prLJA1Uzyb
Quote:
Single-campus student cases are suppressed when (1) reported student cases are 1-4,(2) a campus has at least a 90% student positivity rate when campus enrollment for a school is at least 15 students, or (3) a campus has at least a 50% positivity rate when campus enrollment has fewer than 15 students. Source of infection number are suppressed when student cases are suppressed. Cumulative student cases for a campus are suppressed when(1) student cases are 1-4, or (2) current report numbers have been 1-4 for the any of the first three weeks that student cases are reported. If there is only one campus reporting in a district and it is a multiple campus, student and source of infection numbers are not suppressed for the district total. Otherwise, district totals are suppressed when (1) student cases are 1-4, or (2) a district has at least a 90% student positivity rate when total district enrollment is least 15 students, or, (3) a district has at least a 50% positivity rate when total district enrollment has fewer than 15 students, or (4) cases on a campus have been 1-4 for any of the first three weeks that student cases are reported and there are fewer than 5 campuses reporting in a district (5) if, for the current reporting period, the number of suppressed campuses equals the number of suppressed student cases for those campuses reported within the district or (6) there is only one campus within the district with suppressed student cases.