Boston Herald

Low rates key to opening schools

Top experts say it is possible

- By ALEXI COHAN

Experts from Johns Hopkins University said the first step to safely reopening schools is having low rates of coronaviru­s transmissi­on in the community — something Massachuse­tts has attained.

“A responsibl­e strategy, as we have stressed, starts with making sure the levels of transmissi­on and illness in the surroundin­g community are low,” said Dr. Jennifer Nuzzo, senior scholar at the Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security.

The seven-day weighted average of positive coronaviru­s tests in Massachuse­tts was 1.7% on Thursday, well below the World Health Organizati­on threshold of 5% for safe reopening.

Nuzzo and other health experts, speaking in a Thursday virtual press briefing, said after seeing those positive trends, reopened schools can then mitigate risk by spacing out students or even assigning them to “bubbles” where they only interact with a small number of others.

“These safety measures we think are important and I think they will be helpful to reduce the transmissi­on in school setting, but it will not completely eliminate the risk,” said Nuzzo, adding that schools should also have plans in place for a potential outbreak.

Dr. Josh Sharfstein, vice dean for public health practice and community engagement at the Johns

Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, said there’s evidence children can transmit the coronaviru­s, but not as much as adults.

“It’s an important priority for kids to go back to school and at the same time, we are in the midst of a pandemic that poses a real risk,” said Sharfstein.

Taking a question from the Herald, Nuzzo said maintainin­g safety protocols in schools may be easier than in other spaces such as restaurant­s due to increased control over spacing, mask-wearing and other hygiene policies.

Annette Anderson, an assistant professor in the Johns Hopkins School of Education added, “Schools must convince parents and teachers that they are ready and safe to reopen.”

Anderson suggested schools should invite parents into the building to see what reopening plans could look like and how students would be interactin­g on a daily basis.

In any community, getting students back in classrooms should take priority over opening other public venues and businesses, the experts said.

Anita Cicero, deputy director of the Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security said, “This should be a national priority and it’s much more important, measurably more important, than reopening bars and restaurant­s.”

 ?? hErald StaFF FilE ?? LOOKING TOWARD FALL: Students at the Mary E. Curley School in Jamaica Plain are dismissed on March 16, shortly before all schools were closed by the coronaviru­s. Experts at Johns Hopkins University says schools should be able to reopen in the fall, assuming there are low infection rates in the overall community.
hErald StaFF FilE LOOKING TOWARD FALL: Students at the Mary E. Curley School in Jamaica Plain are dismissed on March 16, shortly before all schools were closed by the coronaviru­s. Experts at Johns Hopkins University says schools should be able to reopen in the fall, assuming there are low infection rates in the overall community.

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