Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

State will stay quiet on school outbreaks

No plans to name where or how many infected

- Madeline Heim, Annysa Johnson and Samantha West

As hundreds of thousands of students return to classrooms across Wisconsin, the state has no plans to publicize details about COVID-19 outbreaks when they occur at schools.

Freedom of informatio­n advocates say that informatio­n should be available to the broader public, and some researcher­s say data could help schools learn from one another. But others worry about protecting students, parents and communitie­s from stigma if informatio­n about outbreaks is shared widely.

Without a state-level source of informatio­n, what you know about outbreaks in your schools may depend on the openness of local school districts and health department­s.

The Wisconsin Department of Health Services confirmed last week it will publish only the number of schools in the state with COVID-19 investigat­ions, which launch when as few as two cases are identified in a given space. The department doesn't plan to name the schools or describe the severity of the outbreaks.

This is similar to how the state treats other facility-wide investigat­ions, which it tracks by category, like outbreaks in group housing, health care settings and other workplaces. One exception is nursing homes, which are regulated by the state and federal government­s and are named on the DHS

site when an investigat­ion occurs.

Bill Lueders, president of the Wisconsin Freedom of Informatio­n Council, said the location and size of school outbreaks should be made public, just as he believes the state health agency should post the names of businesses and other establishm­ents connected to at least two cases of COVID-19.

“I think it’s tragic that the Department of Health Services is being so secretive of COVID cases, and I think it’s contrary to public interest and public health,” he said. “They consistent­ly have shown they don’t particular­ly trust the people of Wisconsin to make reasonable and rational use of public informatio­n.”

School teachers and staff across the state also are wondering what informatio­n will be available to them, since most school decisions are made at the district level, said Ron “Duff ” Martin, president of the Wisconsin Education Associatio­n Council, which represents about 50,000 members across the state.

While schools are bound by privacy laws, he said, teachers and staff have concerns about keeping themselves, their families and their students safe.

“There’s a difference between local control and being able to give the direction and guidance from state level,” Martin said. “There are certain things that should be consistent from school district to school district and county to county.”

Jenni Hofschulte of the Wisconsin Public Education Network said the education advocacy organizati­on supports local control in school districts but would prefer districts follow a common set of rules and practices.

Schools are often the heart of their communitie­s, Hofschulte said, meaning everyone should have access to informatio­n about outbreaks.

“How many people have contact with a school building in a day? It’s far more than students, parents, teachers or school staff. It’s volunteers, grandparen­ts and so much more,” she said.

What is private?

Across the country, schools have cited medical and educationa­l privacy laws in keeping outbreak numbers confidential. But legal experts recently told USA TODAY that these laws don’t bar schools from sharing this informatio­n, as long as it can’t be used to identify specific people.

Standing guidance from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services says that the Health Insurance Portabilit­y and Accountabi­lity Act, or HIPAA — which prohibits medical providers from releasing identifyin­g informatio­n about a patient — doesn’t apply to elementary or secondary schools.

Educationa­l records are kept private by the Family Educationa­l Rights and Privacy Act, or FERPA, but the U.S. Department of Education said in March that the law doesn’t prevent schools from sharing non-identifyin­g details about COVID-19 cases.

Wisconsin statute requires schools to notify local health officials if they know or suspect a communicab­le disease is present in a building, either among students, teachers or other staff.

New DHS guidance issued to schools says administra­tors should track cases, other illnesses and student absences. In the event of a confirmed or probable case of COVID-19, DHS said administra­tors should notify families and all teachers and staff.

But no recommenda­tions are given as to how or when Wisconsin schools should inform the public about the size and location of outbreaks.

‘A really slippery slope’

For many school officials and families, the benefits of having informatio­n about an outbreak are clear. But some disagree on whether the general public needs to see it, too.

Dr. Maggie Nolan, a preventati­ve medicine physician in Madison whose oldest child is starting first grade this year at Madison Country Day School in Waunakee, said she’s asked the school to provide parents with the number of students absent from school on a given day.

Because COVID-19 has a wide range of symptoms and may not present the same way in all children, she said, she might opt for virtual learning if several of her daughter’s classmates are out sick — whether or not they’ve been confirmed COVID-positive.

She served on a medical advisory board to help guide the school’s reopening, and said she feels like she’s gotten “a strong commitment” from school leaders that they’ll tell parents what they want to know about outbreaks.

Still, Nolan said she doesn’t believe that informatio­n necessaril­y needs to be shared with the broader public.

“There will be talk of it in the community enough to make people aware,” Nolan said. “But adding stigma to certain schools or communitie­s (with outbreaks) is really a slippery slope.”

But Patrick Remington, an epidemiolo­gist at the University of WisconsinM­adison, said people like day care providers and coaches also need to be informed about an outbreak.

He recommends schools to go beyond sending a letter home to families and operate some sort of dashboard to track outbreaks.

It’s critical, Remington said, that schools take control of the message and share informatio­n on outbreaks transparen­tly rather than letting rumors proliferat­e on social media.

“You’ve seen schools where (they’ll say), ‘Ms. Johnson isn’t going to be here tomorrow. She’ll be gone for two weeks,’” he said. “You think a parent doesn’t know what’s going on?”

Without outbreak details from DHS, the responsibi­lity falls to local health department­s and the school districts themselves to decide what informatio­n to share, and how.

Decisions fall to local officials

It’s not clear how much more transparen­cy there will be at the local level.

Two health department­s in Milwaukee County — in Milwaukee and Greenfield — said they have no plans to publicly list numbers of COVID-19 cases by school or school district.

The Milwaukee Health Department said in an email to USA TODAY NETWORK-Wisconsin that schools will be required to notify all parents in a school about positive cases, but the health department will not report numbers publicly by school or district. It said it does not provide informatio­n about positive cases for companies or organizati­ons in any other sector and that it would not treat schools differently.

“Sharing specific, small-scale, demographi­c informatio­n with the public does not aid in the public health mitigation strategies,” the department said in an email.

But Milwaukee Health Commission­er Jeanette Kowalik, in her regularly scheduled Tuesday briefing, appeared to suggest that listing cases by school might happen eventually. She called it “a sensitive topic” and said any decision would have to be made in collaborat­ion with districts, teachers unions and the Department of Public Instructio­n.

“Most schools are virtual in the city of Milwaukee, so it gives us a little time to figure this out,” she said.

In the city of Greenfield, in southweste­rn Milwaukee County, Health Officer Darren Rausch said his office has not yet thought through whether and how it will release informatio­n about schools to the general public. But he said his office doesn’t typically release public health data in small numbers because that can identify individual­s. And schools would likely be treated the same way, he said.

“Disease is all around us,” Rausch said. “I’m not any more concerned because there’s a case in my school, because I know there are other settings that my child is in or could be in where I could get COVID.”

In Waukesha County, west of Milwaukee, health officials added a map to their COVID-19 dashboard showing the number of active cases involving children under 18 by school district geographic area. But it does not cite numbers by school or district, and it includes all children, regardless of where they go to school, including those in private and charter schools and those who are home-schooled.

Nicole Armendariz, spokeswoma­n for Waukesha County Executive Paul Farrow, said it will be up to schools and districts to determine whether to notify anyone, including parents and staff, “who are not close contacts of a positive COVID-19 case.”

 ?? DAN POWERS/USA TODAY NETWORK-WISCONSIN ?? Students head to their classrooms for the first day of school Sept. 3, 2019, at Jefferson Elementary School in Appleton.
DAN POWERS/USA TODAY NETWORK-WISCONSIN Students head to their classrooms for the first day of school Sept. 3, 2019, at Jefferson Elementary School in Appleton.

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