365NEWSX
365NEWSX
Subscribe

Welcome

Child-care centers don't drive coronavirus infections, national study shows - msnNOW

Child-care centers don't drive coronavirus infections, national study shows - msnNOW

Child-care centers don't drive coronavirus infections, national study shows - msnNOW
Oct 15, 2020 3 mins, 24 secs

A large national study published by the American Academy of Pediatrics on Wednesday provides some of the clearest evidence yet that child care centers don’t hasten the spread of the novel coronavirus, even in communities where overall infections are high.

“This is the largest study of COVID transmission in child care programs that’s been attempted in the U.S., and I think globally,” said Yale professor Walter Gilliam, who led a team of researchers in the study.

“These are very positive findings, and they should be very comforting,” both to child care providers and the families who rely on them.

The study surveyed 57,335 providers serving almost 4 million children in two-thirds of the counties in the U.S., including Puerto Rico.

“We found there was absolutely no relationship” between working in child care settings and contracting the virus, Gilliam said.

“Working at a child care center did not put these providers at any increased risk of COVID-19 than if they had stayed home.”.

Adults are far more likely than children to get sick from COVID-19, making providers “a good measuring stick” for the rate of transmission in child care settings, he said.

The newly published findings also conform with low rates of infection and transmission reported by more than 33,000 licensed preschools and day care centers in California, where just 657 children and about 1,000 providers have been sickened since March.

But labor advocates warn that most of those cases have emerged since the Yale study was done, and that rising infections everywhere, combined with widespread reopening and “quarantine fatigue,” could make child care riskier than the study’s findings suggest.

“We’re now in a very different time,” said Lea Austin, director of the Center for the Study of Child Care Employment.

“The report expressly states, ‘Communities may pose a considerable threat to child care when background transmission rates are high.’”.

The study’s authors also cautioned against extrapolating their results to K-12 schools, where larger class sizes and more group mixing make it harder to control the spread of the disease.

At the same time, they acknowledged that child care providers are disproportionately from communities hit hardest by the pandemic.

“The child care setting itself did not contribute to the disparities in race that we see in COVID-19, but there are disparities in communities in which our providers live that do,” Gilliam said.

“Nearly 40% of the child care workforce are women of color, and the elevated risk of COVID-19 that they and their family members face should not be minimized or become a footnote.”.

And while the study’s authors credited “ Herculean efforts” to stem transmission, the smaller classes and stepped-up sanitary procedures that seem to have largely inoculated child care centers against the virus have also led thousands of providers to close under intense financial pressure.

“These findings should make clear that policymakers and leaders ...

are not absolved from protecting the health and safety of the people providing critical child care services,” Austin wrote.

World & Nation

warned Nevada not to use donated Chinese-made coronavirus tests

World & Nation

warned Nevada not to use donated Chinese-made coronavirus tests

diplomats and security officials privately warned Nevada not to use donated coronavirus test kits made in China

Trump’s immigration changes will affect California long after he’s gone

Trump’s immigration changes will affect California long after he’s gone

21: Does expanding rent control make sense in a COVID recession

21: Does expanding rent control make sense in a COVID recession

As voters prepare to vote on a rent control ballot measure, supporters and opponents are both pointing to the coronavirus as a reason to pass or reject Prop

World & Nation

Postal Service agrees to reverse service changes as election looms

World & Nation

Postal Service agrees to reverse service changes as election looms

World & Nation

French police search homes of top officials in coronavirus probe

World & Nation

French police search homes of top officials in coronavirus probe

French police search the homes of the former prime minister and other top officials in an investigation of the government response to the coronavirus

World & Nation

World & Nation

World & Nation

World & Nation

World & Nation

World & Nation

Summarized by 365NEWSX ROBOTS

RECENT NEWS

SUBSCRIBE

Get monthly updates and free resources.

CONNECT WITH US

© Copyright 2024 365NEWSX - All RIGHTS RESERVED