A School Reopens, and the Coronavirus Creeps In

  • 77 results
  • 1
  • 2
Avatar image for angeldeb82
angeldeb82

1724

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 0

#1  Edited By angeldeb82
Member since 2005 • 1724 Posts

We knew it had to happen in Indiana sooner or later, for one of its school districts opened too early, and students are suffering the consequences.

https://www.nytimes.com/2020/08/01/us/schools-reopening-indiana-coronavirus.html

Avatar image for jeezers
jeezers

5341

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 3

User Lists: 0

#2 jeezers
Member since 2007 • 5341 Posts

@angeldeb82: link not working

Avatar image for Xabiss
Xabiss

4749

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 0

#3  Edited By Xabiss
Member since 2012 • 4749 Posts

@jeezers said:

@angeldeb82: link not working

https://www.nytimes.com/2020/08/01/us/schools-reopening-indiana-coronavirus.html they forgot the l at the end.

Avatar image for angeldeb82
angeldeb82

1724

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 0

#4 angeldeb82
Member since 2005 • 1724 Posts

@Xabiss said:
@jeezers said:

@angeldeb82: link not working

https://www.nytimes.com/2020/08/01/us/schools-reopening-indiana-coronavirus.html they forgot the l at the end.

Thanks. I fixed the link at my first posting.

Avatar image for n64dd
N64DD

13167

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 0

#5 N64DD
Member since 2015 • 13167 Posts

Isolate close that room for 14 days, those kids exposed and move on.

Avatar image for horgen
horgen

127525

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 1

User Lists: 0

#6 horgen  Moderator
Member since 2006 • 127525 Posts

@n64dd said:

Isolate close that room for 14 days, those kids exposed and move on.

The classrom itself? Just give it a round of cleaning.

If students have to move between different classrooms for different classes the amount of people you suddenly can come in close contact with rises quickly. A few positive cases and half the school is in quarantine.

Avatar image for n64dd
N64DD

13167

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 0

#7 N64DD
Member since 2015 • 13167 Posts

@horgen: if there was confirmed covid, the room

Has to be shut down for 14 days per cdc.

Avatar image for horgen
horgen

127525

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 1

User Lists: 0

#8 horgen  Moderator
Member since 2006 • 127525 Posts

@n64dd said:

@horgen: if there was confirmed covid, the room

Has to be shut down for 14 days per cdc.

Ah. Here it would only be cleaned/disinfected I think.

Avatar image for Chutebox
Chutebox

50634

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 0

#9 Chutebox
Member since 2007 • 50634 Posts

So the student was tested before the school year and came to school prior to receiving his or her results?

Avatar image for LJS9502_basic
LJS9502_basic

178860

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 0

#10 LJS9502_basic
Member since 2003 • 178860 Posts

@horgen said:
@n64dd said:

@horgen: if there was confirmed covid, the room

Has to be shut down for 14 days per cdc.

Ah. Here it would only be cleaned/disinfected I think.

That's what happens in the US as well.

Avatar image for n64dd
N64DD

13167

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 0

#11  Edited By N64DD
Member since 2015 • 13167 Posts

@horgen: yeah it also depends on exposure

Avatar image for n64dd
N64DD

13167

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 0

#12 N64DD
Member since 2015 • 13167 Posts

@LJS9502_basic: ?

Avatar image for YearoftheSnake5
YearoftheSnake5

9716

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 55

User Lists: 0

#13 YearoftheSnake5
Member since 2005 • 9716 Posts

Reopening schools is a bad idea. Schools are germ boxes in the first place and sending kids to school during a pandemic is practically asking them to bring coronavirus home. It's long past due for America to get serious on this. Just hold class remotely. Once we have a vaccine, make it mandatory in order to go back.

Avatar image for deactivated-5fab1400b2fcc
deactivated-5fab1400b2fcc

2126

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 5

#14  Edited By deactivated-5fab1400b2fcc
Member since 2020 • 2126 Posts

@YearoftheSnake5: You need a liberal in office for that, conservatives will never take this seriously.

Avatar image for comp_atkins
comp_atkins

38685

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 3

User Lists: 0

#15 comp_atkins
Member since 2005 • 38685 Posts

@Chutebox said:

So the student was tested before the school year and came to school prior to receiving his or her results?

the average turn around time for tests in the US is something like 7 days... pretty dismal

Avatar image for Chutebox
Chutebox

50634

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 0

#16 Chutebox
Member since 2007 • 50634 Posts

@comp_atkins: Ya, I just dont understand why someone felt the need to be tested and decided to go out before results were back.

Avatar image for mrbojangles25
mrbojangles25

58452

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 11

User Lists: 0

#17  Edited By mrbojangles25
Member since 2005 • 58452 Posts

This is sad.

No disrespect to all the hardworking teachers and school staff, but American education k-12 is sort of bad for the most part. It's certainly not worth dying over lol.

@Chutebox said:

So the student was tested before the school year and came to school prior to receiving his or her results?

I've read that testing results take upwards of 1-2 weeks to receive now, which essentially defeats the entire purpose of testing since you are supposed to be quarantined for that long if infected anyway.

@Chutebox said:

@comp_atkins: Ya, I just dont understand why someone felt the need to be tested and decided to go out before results were back.

Yeah I don't get it either. I'm assuming there were remote options in place as well or, you know, do what we used to do and just get your friend to bring you the assignments. Though we didn't have internet back then, I'm sure you don't even need a friend grabbing stuff for you these days haha.

Avatar image for horgen
horgen

127525

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 1

User Lists: 0

#18 horgen  Moderator
Member since 2006 • 127525 Posts

@mrbojangles25 said:

@Chutebox said:

So the student was tested before the school year and came to school prior to receiving his or her results?

I've read that testing results take upwards of 1-2 weeks to receive now, which essentially defeats the entire purpose of testing since you are supposed to be quarantined for that long if infected anyway.

1-2 weeks? Either the labs doing the testing are overworked or not properly staffed.

Avatar image for kadin_kai
Kadin_Kai

2247

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 5

User Lists: 0

#19 Kadin_Kai
Member since 2015 • 2247 Posts

I just don’t understand why Trump and the Republican Party is doing this. At every turn, at every decision they make the wrong one.

Avatar image for Chutebox
Chutebox

50634

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 0

#20 Chutebox
Member since 2007 • 50634 Posts

@horgen: Just depends where you get it done. Wife went to hospital couple weeks ago and had her results after two hours.

Avatar image for YearoftheSnake5
YearoftheSnake5

9716

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 55

User Lists: 0

#21 YearoftheSnake5
Member since 2005 • 9716 Posts

@thegreatchomp: And that's sad because public health shouldn't be a partisan issue. I mean, it doesn't get much easier than this to do the right thing. Option A will get more people sick. Option B might be a little inconvenient, but it'll save lives until we can safely return to normal.

Avatar image for LJS9502_basic
LJS9502_basic

178860

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 0

#22 LJS9502_basic
Member since 2003 • 178860 Posts

@YearoftheSnake5 said:

@thegreatchomp: And that's sad because public health shouldn't be a partisan issue. I mean, it doesn't get much easier than this to do the right thing. Option A will get more people sick. Option B might be a little inconvenient, but it'll save lives until we can safely return to normal.

The GOP is afraid of waning power which is why they politicize this. Us v them for their base. It's why they gerrymander, attack the press, use false alarms over mail in voting etc. We are seeing the GOP in their death throes.

Avatar image for HoolaHoopMan
HoolaHoopMan

14724

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 0

#23 HoolaHoopMan
Member since 2009 • 14724 Posts

Reopening schools is going to be a disaster. We had the chance to lock down, get testing strategies, contingencies, and operational details done, but our administration f*cked it up so badly we don't stand a chance.

Instead we had Jared Kushner mulling plans on letting blue states suffer to help the elections come November.

Avatar image for deactivated-5fab1400b2fcc
deactivated-5fab1400b2fcc

2126

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 5

#24 deactivated-5fab1400b2fcc
Member since 2020 • 2126 Posts

@horgen: I got my results in 24 hours.

Avatar image for Willy105
Willy105

26113

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 19

User Lists: 0

#25  Edited By Willy105
Member since 2005 • 26113 Posts

@n64dd: It was a Junior High School, so the student would have been in around 5 different classrooms, with around 20 or so other people in each of the rooms; so all of those (100+) would need to be isolated too.

Avatar image for Solaryellow
Solaryellow

7035

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 0

#26 Solaryellow
Member since 2013 • 7035 Posts

@HoolaHoopMan said:

Reopening schools is going to be a disaster. We had the chance to lock down, get testing strategies, contingencies, and operational details done, but our administration f*cked it up so badly we don't stand a chance.

Instead we had Jared Kushner mulling plans on letting blue states suffer to help the elections come November.

The problem with an actual true lock down was that each state was different in its needs. Places like Montana, N/S Dakota, Wyoming, etc.., did not need the same actions as a New York or Florida or New Jersey. Now I would never argue for the feds receiving positive marks but our states also receive failing marks IMO. A segment will argue that we have never experienced such a problem (which isn't true) before so does that mean I should expect chaos the next time and the time after and the time after that......when "uncharted waters" comes our way?

Avatar image for horgen
horgen

127525

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 1

User Lists: 0

#27 horgen  Moderator
Member since 2006 • 127525 Posts

@thegreatchomp said:

@horgen: I got my results in 24 hours.

That was quick. But different methods have different prep time or whatever it is called.

Avatar image for LJS9502_basic
LJS9502_basic

178860

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 0

#28 LJS9502_basic
Member since 2003 • 178860 Posts

@Solaryellow said:
@HoolaHoopMan said:

Reopening schools is going to be a disaster. We had the chance to lock down, get testing strategies, contingencies, and operational details done, but our administration f*cked it up so badly we don't stand a chance.

Instead we had Jared Kushner mulling plans on letting blue states suffer to help the elections come November.

The problem with an actual true lock down was that each state was different in its needs. Places like Montana, N/S Dakota, Wyoming, etc.., did not need the same actions as a New York or Florida or New Jersey. Now I would never argue for the feds receiving positive marks but our states also receive failing marks IMO. A segment will argue that we have never experienced such a problem (which isn't true) before so does that mean I should expect chaos the next time and the time after and the time after that......when "uncharted waters" comes our way?

Doesn't matter. The entire country should have been locked down but we have no central leadership.

Avatar image for deactivated-5fab1400b2fcc
deactivated-5fab1400b2fcc

2126

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 5

#29 deactivated-5fab1400b2fcc
Member since 2020 • 2126 Posts

@horgen: It is was with Kaiser Permanente. They do it in house for their customers only, so it’s faster.

Avatar image for HoolaHoopMan
HoolaHoopMan

14724

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 0

#30 HoolaHoopMan
Member since 2009 • 14724 Posts

@Solaryellow said:
@HoolaHoopMan said:

Reopening schools is going to be a disaster. We had the chance to lock down, get testing strategies, contingencies, and operational details done, but our administration f*cked it up so badly we don't stand a chance.

Instead we had Jared Kushner mulling plans on letting blue states suffer to help the elections come November.

The problem with an actual true lock down was that each state was different in its needs. Places like Montana, N/S Dakota, Wyoming, etc.., did not need the same actions as a New York or Florida or New Jersey. Now I would never argue for the feds receiving positive marks but our states also receive failing marks IMO. A segment will argue that we have never experienced such a problem (which isn't true) before so does that mean I should expect chaos the next time and the time after and the time after that......when "uncharted waters" comes our way?

Saying that each state would have different needs is stating the obvious. States could deal with it as they saw fit, given they stay within 'guard rail' policies set forth by the federal government and managed their hospital infrastructure and infection rates on a needs basis. However, individual states don't have the real ability to shut down borders between others in lieu of an absence of country wide responses. If half of the states can't handle their sh*t the others that aren't hit as hard are put at a much greater risk. It's a basic collective action problem. The same example can be seen by people refusing to wear a mask, where it really takes all parties to act in unison to be most effective.

Additionally, many governors don't have the resources at their disposal to mount a truly effective plan like the president does. Trump had the ability to lead via top down directives and example but blew it. Instead he's casting blame on local leaders that have far less weapons at their disposal to fight this threat. So while you can fault many governors for mistakes and the choices they've made, this problem lacked a spear headed effort from the federal government to start.

In short, it's classic Trump shifting blame as per usual.

Avatar image for Solaryellow
Solaryellow

7035

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 0

#31  Edited By Solaryellow
Member since 2013 • 7035 Posts

@HoolaHoopMan said:
@Solaryellow said:
@HoolaHoopMan said:

Reopening schools is going to be a disaster. We had the chance to lock down, get testing strategies, contingencies, and operational details done, but our administration f*cked it up so badly we don't stand a chance.

Instead we had Jared Kushner mulling plans on letting blue states suffer to help the elections come November.

The problem with an actual true lock down was that each state was different in its needs. Places like Montana, N/S Dakota, Wyoming, etc.., did not need the same actions as a New York or Florida or New Jersey. Now I would never argue for the feds receiving positive marks but our states also receive failing marks IMO. A segment will argue that we have never experienced such a problem (which isn't true) before so does that mean I should expect chaos the next time and the time after and the time after that......when "uncharted waters" comes our way?

Saying that each state would have different needs is stating the obvious. States could deal with it as they saw fit, given they stay within 'guard rail' policies set forth by the federal government and managed their hospital infrastructure and infection rates on a needs basis. However, individual states don't have the real ability to shut down borders between others in lieu of an absence of country wide responses. If half of the states can't handle their sh*t the others that aren't hit as hard are put at a much greater risk. It's a basic collective action problem. The same example can be seen by people refusing to wear a mask, where it really takes all parties to act in unison to be most effective.

Additionally, many governors don't have the resources at their disposal to mount a truly effective plan like the president does. Trump had the ability to lead via top down directives and example but blew it. Instead he's casting blame on local leaders that have far less weapons at their disposal to fight this threat. So while you can fault many governors for mistakes and the choices they've made, this problem lacked a spear headed effort from the federal government to start.

In short, it's classic Trump shifting blame as per usual.

Each state having different needs is obvious but you still say to lock it all down? Many years ago the SCOTUS ruled (on at least three different occasions) a state could shut down its own borders for disease/disaster, etc.., . No one wanted a complete lock down even for a few weeks. The SAHO here in my state, as an example, was a epic joke. Could a more thorough solution been enacted? Absolutely. Our states are not as impotent as you want to suggest when it comes to resources. Recall what happened when (early on) Trump wanted to lock down and quarantine a hot spot aka NYC. Cuomo and his pals went ballistic talking about the act being illegal, unconstitutional, etc.., but lets do it on a nationwide level? The five boroughs was bad but nationwide good?

Avatar image for deactivated-63d1ad7651984
deactivated-63d1ad7651984

10057

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 13

#32  Edited By deactivated-63d1ad7651984
Member since 2017 • 10057 Posts

This is so stupid there's not even a vaccine out what are people thinking? that it's going to magically disappear? I say by October Schools will start shutting down again. This country never learns I feel bad for the kids growing up in this pandemic era.

Avatar image for LJS9502_basic
LJS9502_basic

178860

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 0

#33 LJS9502_basic
Member since 2003 • 178860 Posts

@warmblur said:

This is so stupid there's not even a vaccine out what are people thinking? that it's going to magical disappear? I say by October Schools will start shutting down again. This country never learns I feel bad for the kids growing up in this pandemic era.

Unfortunately the trumpers and the wealthy that CAN stay home want everything open. trumpers because they sadly believe it's not real and the wealthy for their money.

Avatar image for n64dd
N64DD

13167

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 0

#34 N64DD
Member since 2015 • 13167 Posts

@LJS9502_basic said:
@warmblur said:

This is so stupid there's not even a vaccine out what are people thinking? that it's going to magical disappear? I say by October Schools will start shutting down again. This country never learns I feel bad for the kids growing up in this pandemic era.

Unfortunately the trumpers and the wealthy that CAN stay home want everything open. trumpers because they sadly believe it's not real and the wealthy for their money.

CDC wants schools open and everybody in charge of education. So you're mindless rabble is just that.

Avatar image for LJS9502_basic
LJS9502_basic

178860

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 0

#35 LJS9502_basic
Member since 2003 • 178860 Posts

@n64dd said:

CDC wants schools open and everybody in charge of education. So you're mindless rabble is just that.

The CDC wants schools open safely!

Avatar image for Sevenizz
Sevenizz

6462

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 1

User Lists: 0

#36 Sevenizz
Member since 2010 • 6462 Posts

@thegreatchomp: ‘You need a liberal in office for that, conservatives will never take this seriously.‘

The same Democrats that told people to party it up in California/NY, and told everyone it’s ok to mass protest/riot because somehow the virus was immune to anti Trump demonstrations? Those liberals?

Avatar image for deactivated-5fab1400b2fcc
deactivated-5fab1400b2fcc

2126

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 5

#37 deactivated-5fab1400b2fcc
Member since 2020 • 2126 Posts

@Sevenizz: LMAO. Ok Trumpkin.

Avatar image for LJS9502_basic
LJS9502_basic

178860

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 0

#38 LJS9502_basic
Member since 2003 • 178860 Posts

@Sevenizz said:

@thegreatchomp: ‘You need a liberal in office for that, conservatives will never take this seriously.‘

The same Democrats that told people to party it up in California/NY, and told everyone it’s ok to mass protest/riot because somehow the virus was immune to anti Trump demonstrations? Those liberals?

Anti trump? I guess you mean he's against equality for minorities. Finally a trumpkin admitting trump is racist.

Avatar image for deactivated-5f9e3c6a83e51
deactivated-5f9e3c6a83e51

57548

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 19

User Lists: 0

#39 deactivated-5f9e3c6a83e51
Member since 2004 • 57548 Posts

Closing schools has far more dangerous impact than many people realize. To many families, that provides their daily meals, child care, structure, etc. I have no problem with schools re-opening and neither does Dr. Fauci.

Avatar image for LJS9502_basic
LJS9502_basic

178860

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 0

#40  Edited By LJS9502_basic
Member since 2003 • 178860 Posts

@sonicare said:

Closing schools has far more dangerous impact than many people realize. To many families, that provides their daily meals, child care, structure, etc. I have no problem with schools re-opening and neither does Dr. Fauci.

Fauci says safely.....and not in hotspots.

Avatar image for horgen
horgen

127525

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 1

User Lists: 0

#41 horgen  Moderator
Member since 2006 • 127525 Posts

Aren’t classes rather large in US? Like up to 40 students per classroom?

Avatar image for br0kenrabbit
br0kenrabbit

17878

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 10

User Lists: 0

#42 br0kenrabbit
Member since 2004 • 17878 Posts

@horgen said:

Aren’t classes rather large in US? Like up to 40 students per classroom?

Sometimes more, often packed in like sardines.

Also, that bus ride home. Good luck with social distancing there.

Avatar image for horgen
horgen

127525

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 1

User Lists: 0

#43 horgen  Moderator
Member since 2006 • 127525 Posts

Also interesting https://www.the-scientist.com/news-opinion/children-often-carry-more-coronavirus-than-adults-study-67785

Avatar image for sancho_panzer
Sancho_Panzer

2524

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 0

#44  Edited By Sancho_Panzer
Member since 2015 • 2524 Posts

@horgen said:

Also interesting https://www.the-scientist.com/news-opinion/children-often-carry-more-coronavirus-than-adults-study-67785

Weird. I wonder if it's something to do with bacteria. Kids tend to consume more sugar, which would presumably lead to a boom in bacterial populations.

It's probably irresponsible to be speculating, but it's hard not to when you get unexpected results like this. I remember reading somewhere that people who used mouthwash appeared to be less susceptible, but maybe that was just a marketing thing.

Avatar image for horgen
horgen

127525

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 1

User Lists: 0

#45 horgen  Moderator
Member since 2006 • 127525 Posts

@br0kenrabbit said:
@horgen said:

Aren’t classes rather large in US? Like up to 40 students per classroom?

Sometimes more, often packed in like sardines.

Also, that bus ride home. Good luck with social distancing there.

Half the kid on top of the bus. Since safety is not a concern.

@sancho_panzer said:
@horgen said:

Also interesting https://www.the-scientist.com/news-opinion/children-often-carry-more-coronavirus-than-adults-study-67785

Weird. I wonder if it's something to do with bacteria. Kids tend to consume more sugar, which would presumably lead to a boom in bacterial populations.

It's probably irresponsible to be speculating, but it's hard not to when you get unexpected results like this. I remember reading somewhere that people who used mouthwash appeared to be less susceptible, but maybe that was just a marketing thing.

Less developed immunesystem which is slower to react I guess.

Avatar image for sancho_panzer
Sancho_Panzer

2524

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 0

#46  Edited By Sancho_Panzer
Member since 2015 • 2524 Posts

@horgen said:

Less developed immunesystem which is slower to react I guess.

Would that affect their oral viral load, or rather the extent of infection? In my head it was a strong immune system which protected them from symptomatic infection, even under exposure to increased viral load. Not sure about this ofc.

Avatar image for horgen
horgen

127525

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 1

User Lists: 0

#47 horgen  Moderator
Member since 2006 • 127525 Posts

@sancho_panzer said:
@horgen said:

Less developed immunesystem which is slower to react I guess.

Would that affect their oral viral load, or rather the extent of infection? In my head it was a strong immune system which protected them from symptomatic infection, even under exposure to increased viral load. Not sure about this ofc.

I have no idea.

I'm guessing the extent of infection relies on how big the viral load is as well as the extent of well the virus can enter the cells through the receptors it uses.

Kids are not "miniature adults". They react differently to a lot of stuff.

Avatar image for sancho_panzer
Sancho_Panzer

2524

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 0

#48 Sancho_Panzer
Member since 2015 • 2524 Posts

@horgen: True. Probably immunity is nowhere near as one dimensional as I'm imagining.

Avatar image for br0kenrabbit
br0kenrabbit

17878

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 10

User Lists: 0

#49 br0kenrabbit
Member since 2004 • 17878 Posts

@horgen said:
@sancho_panzer said:
@horgen said:

Less developed immunesystem which is slower to react I guess.

Would that affect their oral viral load, or rather the extent of infection? In my head it was a strong immune system which protected them from symptomatic infection, even under exposure to increased viral load. Not sure about this ofc.

I have no idea.

I'm guessing the extent of infection relies on how big the viral load is as well as the extent of well the virus can enter the cells through the receptors it uses.

Kids are not "miniature adults". They react differently to a lot of stuff.

I think it has to do with the Thymus. It atrophies at puberty.

Avatar image for amillionhp
amillionhp

773

Forum Posts

0

Wiki Points

0

Followers

Reviews: 0

User Lists: 0

#50 amillionhp
Member since 2008 • 773 Posts

Everyone does realize closing schools will place more parents out of work, right?