Calgary Herald

BACK TO SCHOOL

ABOUT A DOZEN COUNTRIES HAVE SENT KIDS BACK TO THE CLASSROOM. WHAT CANADA CAN LEARN FROM THEM

- SHARON KIRKEY

Staggered start times, break times, dismissal times. Alternate shifts, alternate days. Math class in church cemeteries. No playing catch or hugging, however hula hooping permitted.

More than three out of four children and youth worldwide — 1.37 billion students — were affected by COVID-19 school closures as countries, fearful children would be infected and propagate the virus, emptied classrooms in March.

More than a dozen countries have since fully or partially reopened schools. As Canada’s provinces scramble to bring students back to something resembling “near-normal” learning, there are lessons to be learned from what went well — and not so well.

Ontario’s education minister promises next week to unveil a new plan to reopen schools. “The premier and the government continue to be focused on a safe, convention­al, day-to-day return to school,” education minister Stephen Lecee said Thursday. “Maybe a new convention­al where kids still can go to school five days a week.”

Toronto’s Sickkids hospital is also due to update its guidance after last month laying out a plan that advised not requiring children to wear masks or maintain social distancing while at play.

Alberta has vowed to open schools at “near-normal” levels for K-to-12 students come September. British Columbia is also aiming for a full return of primary and middle school students, rather than a hybrid model of part-time inclass, part-time virtual learning, that few parents want.

There’s near universal agreement that continued closures would be disastrous. Children’s hospitals are already seeing a spike in mental health consults and vulnerable kids are bearing the physical and emotional brunt of prolonged shutdowns.

What can the experience­s in other countries teach us? “We have to be super-careful,” cautions Arthur Caplan, founding head of the division of ethics at NYU School of Medicine in New York

City. “People keep saying, ‘we can learn from other countries, we can learn from their experience­s.’ This thing’s been around since March. What are we, July? It’s four months of experience (with COVID-19). I wouldn’t call that solid yet.”

Certainly, there are risks of restarting class, of picking up where we left off, says Amy Greer. But they’re hard to quantify. The risks depend on the amount of community transmissi­on happening in a given area, and public health’s ability to rapidly test, contact trace and stamp out flare-ups.

Different countries and different school districts have taken different approaches. And not all children are equal. It’s still hard to get a feel for the true impact on transmissi­on dynamics, “because most of what we know seems to be coming from media reports, which is less than ideal,” Greer, Canada Research Chair in population disease modelling said this week at a virtual panel discussion hosted by the Global Research Collaborat­ion for Infectious Disease Prevention.

When do kids become more like adults in their ability to get, and spread the virus? The evidence so far suggests that, unlike the flu and other respirator­y bugs, children don’t appear to be super-spreaders, that kids aren’t to blame for COVID-19 surges or spikes. A recent commentary in the journal Pediatrics suggests schools should be allowed to remain open, even during periods of COVID-19 spread.

Denmark became the first country in Europe to reopen its schools in April after early evidence suggested children usually don’t become very ill with COVID. Primary schoolchil­dren were the first to return. “Micro-groups” of 12 students arrive at staggered times, “eat lunch separately, stay in their own zones in the playground and are taught by one teacher,” according to a recent academic summary of school reopenings. Children wash their hands hourly, but staff and students aren’t requested to wear masks. Classes are taught inside one day, moved outside the next, including church graveyards where, as Bloomberg reported, fifth graders have calculated ages based on birth and death dates engraved on gravestone­s. School reopenings in Denmark have so far not led to any obvious increase in the growth rate of COVID-19. “You cannot see any negative effects from the reopening of school,” Dr. Peter Andersen of the Danish Serum Institute told Reuters.

Norway shuttered its schools in early March and then began bringing students back in April, with kindergart­en students first, then grades 1 through 4. Older children returned in May. The primary school students washed their desks daily, class sizes were capped at 15 and, like Denmark, reopening didn’t reignite the epidemic.

Germany began gradually reopening a limited number of high schools in May. Students sat in small (eight to 10) class sizes at designated desks separated by tape. Researcher­s shared the results of a study of more than 2,000 high school students and teachers from 13 schools in Saxony: Five millimetre­s of blood were withdrawn from an arm vein and examined for antibodies to the SARSCOV-2 virus. Of the 2,045 blood samples examined, antibodies were detected in only 12, “which correspond­s to a share well below one per cent,” professor Reinhard Berner of the University Hospital Carl Gustav Carus said in a statement. “This means that a silent, symptom-free infection has so far occurred less frequently than we had suspected among the students and teachers we examined.”

Israel, by contrast, offers a cautionary lesson. After a complete lockdown of all schools in March, Israel began limited reopening of kindergart­en to grade 12 students in small groups in early May, and a couple weeks later, on May 17, flung open the entire school system while simultaneo­usly lifting restrictio­ns on bars, restaurant­s and gatherings.

“What happened next was entirely predictabl­e,” Hagai Levine, an epidemiolo­gist at the Braun School of Public Health and Community Medicine of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem told the Daily Beast. Ten days later, there was a major COVID-19 outbreak at a high school in Jerusalem; 260 students, staff, relatives and friends were infected. The outbreak

“displayed mass COVID-19 transmissi­on upon school reopening,” according to one study that blamed crowded classes of 35 to 38 that made physical distancing impossible, and an unbearable heat wave that led Health Minister Yuli Edelstein to temporaril­y lift mask rules for students. As of mid-july, 125 schools and 258 kindergart­ens had been closed because of COVID-19 infections, reports the Washington Post.

Sweden was one of few countries that kept day care and primary schools open. According to a report by Public Health Agency of Sweden researcher­s, closures and reopenings did not have an impact on the number of lab-confirmed cases of SARS-COV-2 in primary school kids (ages seven to 15), indicating that children likely play a small role in propagatin­g the infection.

Another report, this one by researcher­s at the Institut Pasteur in France, found no significan­t child-to-child, or child-to-teacher transmissi­on in primary schools. Researcher­s found just three probable cases of COVID-19 among 510 students in three different schools in Crépyen-valois before schools shut for the February vacation, and then for the lockdown. According to the researcher­s, children ages six to 11 appear less contagious than teenagers.

Still, sending children back to school isn’t going to be zero-risk, Greer said, and Caplan worries about older teachers, older janitors, older bus drivers and older support personnel. Another worry is the notion of a onesize fits all approach. “A big private school with sprawling grounds and high school kids, I’m pretty sure can pull of distancing,” Caplan said. “An inner-city poor school with small rooms maybe needs to think about getting into a different space.”

Nor are all kids alike, he said. “What puts your kid at risk? If it’s your high school kid and they vape, is that a problem? If it’s your little kid and they have asthma, do you have to think twice? If it’s a kid who has had some kind of genetic disease, like sickle cell or something, does it matter?

“You don’t want to say, ‘okay, school’s open. Let’s go.”

 ?? HENNING BAGGER / RITZAU SCANPIX / AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES FILES ?? Denmark became the first country in Europe to reopen its schools in April, after evidence suggested children usually
don’t become very ill with COVID-19.
HENNING BAGGER / RITZAU SCANPIX / AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES FILES Denmark became the first country in Europe to reopen its schools in April, after evidence suggested children usually don’t become very ill with COVID-19.

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