CDC Removes 24 Percent Of Child COVID-19 Deaths, Thousands Of Others https://t.co/H0SrdHxnVn
— zerohedge (@zerohedge) March 18, 2022
CDC Removes 24 Percent Of Child COVID-19 Deaths, Thousands Of Others https://t.co/H0SrdHxnVn
— zerohedge (@zerohedge) March 18, 2022
Has this been known for a while?KidDoc said:
I am not surprised at all. It is very mild in almost all kids.
Yes. My daughter was completely asymptomatic. Many of my students have contracted it, and I've not heard of a single case that was more serious than a mild fever.West Point Aggie said:Has this been known for a while?KidDoc said:
I am not surprised at all. It is very mild in almost all kids.
Pokgai said:
Honest mistake or not. Politics or not. I think we can all agree on that this is good news for everyone.
setsmachine said:
Early in the pandemic in GA there were news reports all over social media of a 7 year old dying from covid, which of course caused a lot of panic with parents. A week later it was reported that the child had a high fever from Covid, which caused a febrile seizure in the bathtub and he drowned.
Completely tragic situation and yes covid had a part, but without any other details initially, everyone was imagining a child in the ICU on a respirator. At least I was. The full detail story didn't get nearly as much press the next week.
cisgenderedAggie said:Pokgai said:
Honest mistake or not. Politics or not. I think we can all agree on that this is good news for everyone.
No. Just no. Medical guidance and and life altering policy decisions were made on the basis of this. The only reason things like this would be allowed to slide under the table is because it's the government and the "right kind of thinking" is in power right now. If a private sector operation got things with even a fraction of the importance or implications this wrong, the lawsuits and even criminal charges would be everywhere.
Assuming this is true (which I've not gone to source)…Honest mistake or not, politics or not, heads should roll for allowing such a gross error to occur and go u corrected for more than about a week. Some people should never be allowed to work in their current fields again.
Exactly. To all of what you stated really. Working here in a district, you can see the issues everyday. There are no doubt behavioral and educational issues that are huge. A lot of kids have been very negatively impacted by this and it shows in classroom performance. But I would be remiss to not include the other opportunities and activities that kids had to (and in some cases still have to) give up in the name of mitigation that NEVER should have happened. Senior and junior proms, camps, sports, extracurriculars etc. Many tried to diminish these things b/c "people were dying" when they didn't realize the real negative effect and impact losing these things had on young people. And they will unfortunately never be repaid for what they had to sacrifice b/c of our overreaction.planoaggie123 said:
I hate that for your son. At the time "only" my daughters Kinder year was impacted but it obviously bled into her 1st grade year (including a few confrontations with the principal) and the reliance on technology to teach has remained since and will ultimately will be the most impactful "long COVID" symptom for kids.
yes, yes, and yes. It's been two years since we were right in the middle of it. Still makes my blood boil. I used to drive by the high school and just cry.Capitol Ag said:
Exactly. To all of what you stated really. Working here in a district, you can see the issues everyday. There are no doubt behavioral and educational issues that are huge. A lot of kids have been very negatively impacted by this and it shows in classroom performance. But I would be remiss to not include the other opportunities and activities that kids had to (and in some cases still have to) give up in the name of mitigation that NEVER should have happened. Senior and junior proms, camps, sports, extracurriculars etc. Many tried to diminish these things b/c "people were dying" when they didn't realize the real negative effect and impact losing these things had on young people. And they will unfortunately never be repaid for what they had to sacrifice b/c of our overreaction.
Prexys Moon said:
I'll never, ever forgive these idiots for stealing my son's senior year spring from him. *******s. spring sports, school, graduation, etc. Closing schools in Spring 2020 was absolutely, 100 percent unnecessary.
I'll never forget the Friday afternoon in April when Abbott announced school was done for the year. It was a cold dreary day and it fit perfectly. My wife and I knew it was over, senior year over, done with one word from the tyrants. Long night of looking at yearbooks and grieving what had been taken.
I still shudder thinking about hearing there was a new Abbott press conference and tuning in to see what was either being taken or given back. It was like the hunger games.
Thank God for Ron Desantis, or Abbott would have taken a lot longer to come around. A lot longer.
The initial valid concern was that young kids would be significant vectors and we could see staggering mortality in the teacher population. I think it was reasonable to pause BRIEFLY while we figured out what the heck this new virus was and how to best counter it. Once we figured out kids weren't great at spreading it schools should have gone back to normal, Fall 2020 at the latest (IMO).planoaggie123 said:
Maybe you can say we didn't have a handle on things but there was some data....Italy showed early who this was impacting the most....we reacted to impact everyone instead of only the high risk...it was wrong...hopefully we never have a knee-jerk reaction like this again....
I think this is a good way to look at it. Yes, there was a lot of concern and perhaps a need to step back and look at this at least in March 2020. But I also agree that everything coming out of Italy and even China (normally I do not trust China obviously) seemed to point to this not hurting children and younger people. I really wanted the NCAAs to continue and same with spring pro and college sports and most school MS and HS activities. Heck, school could have kept going. We do now know it SHOULD have kept going.96ags said:
[F]or me, it's just dishonest to sluff it off as "well we didn't know, so we had to do something".
We shouldn't have done anything unless we KNEW it would work. There were real cost to those decisions.
96ags said:
It's just dishonest to sluff it off as "well we didn't know, so we had to do something".
We shouldn't have done anything unless we KNEW it would work. There were real cost to those decisions.
planoaggie123 said:
huge billboard at DNT and George Bush from Children's Hospital pushing COVID vaccine for kids...makes me sick...