Injuries, sickness and stuff…

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Meaningless is a bit strong. Everyone including MyKayla should be practicing every precaution (and you’d think she would be the advocate having had a shit time herself) but it is true that she has a lower risk than her teammates.

I’m so sorry for Kara. She seems like such a nice kid. To have this be the thing that circles the globe - and all the “OMG thank goodness it was just her!” sorts of comments that will come along with it - just absolutely sucks.
 
Meaningless is a bit strong. Everyone including MyKayla should be practicing every precaution (and you’d think she would be the advocate having had a shit time herself) but it is true that she has a lower risk than her teammates.
Absolutely inaccurate. Especially given the Delta variant (which is what Eaker has), Skinner is not at lower risk than anyone.
 
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Absolutely inaccurate. Especially given the Delta variant (which is what Eaker has), Skinner is not at lower risk than anyone.
I do not think thats true. I think that even with the Delta variant previously infected people have a higher level of protection. Just like with the vaccines. It may not be as high a protection as with the wildtype or earlier variants. But it is still enhanced protection. You are still talking about an ab response.
 
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I don’t see where anyone has shared that Eaker has Delta?

But it is true that prior infection plus vaccine is the best-case scenario. Reinfection has happened, but it is rare. It is just as true that MS is more protected than her vaccinated teammates as it is that Leanne is less protected. Following the rules should be black and white, but we don’t have to justify that by pretending that everyone’s immunity status is the same. It is enough that no one’s risk is 0, and this is a huge population mixing event, so put your damn mask over your nose.
 
So if the false positive story is correct, the alternates were definitely training with the competing gymnasts yesterday. Although it does look as if they made some attempt to keep them separate, at least in the line up.

 
This is true. In the state where I worked, Massachusetts, we had strict protocols in the public schools that kept cases low, and in the district where I worked we had no in building spread. Sports are harder, and the one sport that had an issue was hockey, which may have been in part because masked were required nearly all the time during high school sports in Massachusetts except for narrow exceptions (swimmers/divers while in the pool for obvious reasons and X-country could say pull the mask down if more than 6 feet from other runners.) Obviously, that’s not the same as an event where everyone lives there, but I would think committing to proper masking, efforts at more distancing, and experimenting with opening windows and air purifiers would be a decent start.
 
This is true. In the state where I worked, Massachusetts, we had strict protocols in the public schools that kept cases low, and in the district where I worked we had no in building spread. Sports are harder, and the one sport that had an issue was hockey, which may have been in part because masked were required nearly all the time during high school sports in Massachusetts except for narrow exceptions (swimmers/divers while in the pool for obvious reasons and X-country could say pull the mask down if more than 6 feet from other runners.) Obviously, that’s not the same as an event where everyone lives there, but I would think committing to proper masking, efforts at more distancing, and experimenting with opening windows and air purifiers would be a decent start.
Its very interesting how cases and transmission was low across the board in schools. I think it was due to high level of compliance with masks and social distancing in the classroom plus kids just do not contract and transmit at the high levels older folks do. The problems seemed to arise with Hs kids at sporting events and after school socializing.
 
Also, as soon as there was a positive student or staff that classroom teacher, all of the students, and any support staff members were quarantined at home for 2 weeks.
If a student tested positive with family members at that school those students had to stay home too.

We had three outbreaks but were luckily contained. 3 separate classrooms had 3 students test positive. All 3 classroom teachers ended up catching Covid from the positive student and 4, 7, and 9 students caught Covid from the classroom. Those are the ones that we knew about, there were likely more positive student cases, they just didn’t get tested for Covid.

In addition, any cold symptoms at all and the student was mandated to get a Covid test before returning to school. If a parent called to say their kid had a fever and was staying home, the child could not return unless negative Covid test. One parent said they had no transportation to get a Covid test, so the child stayed home for two weeks then returned to school after the quarantine session was up.

The hybrid model was also essential as the highest class number during hybrid was 11 (average was 6 students in a class) so students were separated well in classrooms.
 
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