Hindustan Times (Delhi)

SOP ready, no plan to open schools for now

- Rhythma Kaul letters@hindustant­imes.com

nNEW DELHI: The government has had standard operating procedures or SOPS for reopening schools for at least a month, said people familiar with the matter, although one of them added there are no immediate plans to open schools when the current restrictio­ns, in place to manage coronaviru­s disease and limit its spread, end on August 31.

While the SOPS have been approved, the people added, asking not to be named, the final decision on reopening schools will be taken by home ministry.

The technical wing of the directorat­e general of health services in June drafted SOPS on reopening educationa­l institutio­ns in the lines of Sops issued for reopening of malls, hotels, restaurant­s, gymnasiums, yoga classes, religious places, they said, but having the SOPS doesn’t mean schools will reopen as soon as the restrictio­ns end.

The issue is a contentiou­s, controvers­ial, and complex one -everywhere in the world. The Australian state of Victoria, for instance, has just shut schools for six weeks after a resurgence of the pandemic, although this hasn’t been traced back to the schools. In May, Israel was forced to do the same after a so-called second wave of infections -- and in the country’s case, these were directly attributab­le to the schools. In the US, some states have reopened schools, but many have also shut down again following infections.

The education ministry requested that the SOPS be created after other facilities were being opened in phases, the people said. They added that the health ministry drafted them. They recommend getting only senior school children in at first -and in shifts -- and stringent social distancing norms with neither student nor staff strength exceeding a third of pre-pandemic strengths.

Still, one of the officials familiar with the matter said, “the decision of reopening around September 1 seems remote as of now but since it is a dynamic situation, and decisions tend to change as per requiremen­t. The SOPS will come into effect only when a decision is taken in this regard.” To be sure, the decision is also likely to be left to the states. Part of the desire to reopen schools in India also stems from the digital divide which affects many students from underprivi­leged background­s from attending online classes. A second official added that the issue of schools reopening came up for discussion ahead of the last set of guidelines issued on July 29, but that no decision was taken because” taken as it was believed that education ministry was still engaging with states, and more importantl­y with parents.”

The first official said several rounds of discussion with states have been held and that “most states and almost all parents are not in favour of reopening.”

The discussion on schools comes amidst a surge in Covid-19 cases. India crossed the 2 million mark in terms of number of cases on Thursday, becoming only the third country in the world to reach this number. It added its second million in exactly three weeks. There has been no let up in the number of daily cases too and the pandemic has clearly moved into the hinterland and the peninsula.

The people said that the Sops suggest reducing student strength in a class, maintainin­g physical distancing, wearing of masks, training teachers in picking up early signs of respirator­y distress, and keeping gadgets such as pulse oximeters handy . Those students already suffering from any of the chronic respirator­y illnesses should avoid attending, they added.

According to a paper published in JAMA Pediatrics by doctors from Ann and Robert H Lurie Children’s Hospital, Chicago, and Northweste­rn University Feinberg School of Medicine, Chicago, children younger than five have higher viral loads and could be “drivers” of the infection in “the general population.” The study was silent on the role of older children as potential super spreaders.

Doctors say the government should wait. “More time should be given before schools are reopened. Children will be moving in closed spaces and could get infected and be carriers. They will bring infection home, and many will have grandparen­ts and other vulnerable people at home who will be at risk... Ideally, I would say, open only next year,” said Dr Rahul Nagpal, senior paediatric­ian, Fortis Healthcare.

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