Hastings Leader

Poor kid’s cough common in cold

Covid caution could lower school winter attendance

- Shannon Johnstone

School attendance­s are set to suffer as students with respirator­y problems stay home to avoid Covid-19.

However, for many, remaining home will also mean staying in “incredibly toxic” damp houses.

Kimi Ora Primary principal Matt O’Dowda said the Flaxmere school had at least six students with asthma who are staying home until level 1 was announced.

On the first day of level 2, just over half of the school returned. It went up to 65 per cent the following day and slowly increased across the week.

There was a myriad reasons for the absences but O’Dowda highlighte­d the quality of housing that kids lived in during lockdown as one of them.

Lower decile schools are more susceptibl­e to have students affected by asthma and other conditions, and ongoing colds and sore throats are common every winter, he said.

At level 2 parents are asked to keep any sick child at home and if a sick child does come to school, they will be sent home.

O’Dowda said parents were being “really responsibl­e” in keeping kids home, but some of the housing stock needed work.

Mouldy Hawke’s Bay horror — and the solution

Alice Peacock is a social worker with the Child Healthy Housing programme in Hawke’s Bay.

The initiative was started about five years ago due to the high rates of children hospitalis­ed for preventabl­e housing-related illnesses in the region.

In that time she’s seen some mouldy horrors in the region, including ceilings and walls that are barely recognisab­le they’ve been so overrun with it.

Housing that is mouldy, damp, drafty and cold can cause serious illness and it’s often children who are the most affected.

Peacock said when children have to take time off school due to housing-related illness it not only impacts their education but puts financial pressure on parents who have to take time off work to look after children.

Peacock describes it as “incredibly toxic”.

Children can get anything from a cough to bronchitis, strep throat, pneumonia or other respirator­y illnesses which can hospitalis­e them.

It’s something the Healthy Homes initiative hopes to help prevent in 500 Hawke’s Bay homes a year — supporting vulnerable families with education and resources.

The team inspects the 500 homes then provides the families with education such as ways they can reduce mould, insulate, make the house less damp and warmer.

Many of the issues Peacock sees in unhealthy homes are to do with dampness.

Houses without mechanical ventilatio­n in bathrooms can create a damp environmen­t which can be a breeding ground for mould.

She recommends people open windows for 10 minutes a day, put lids on pots when cooking,

The ideal indoor temperatur­e is between 18-20 degrees Celsius and if air temperatur­es drop below 16C at night respirator­y attacks can be triggered, she said.

Insulation on the way

Energy Minister Megan Woods said insulation installers for the Government’s Warmer Kiwi Homes programme are gearing up to take on more staff after last week’s $56 million funding boost.

Woods says the funding boost will deliver an additional 9000 insulation and heating retrofits across New Zealand, and will also see grants increase to 90 per cent.

As of March, there have been over 1000 insulation and heating retrofits in the Hawke’s Bay region under Warmer Kiwi Homes, including 885 insulation retrofits, and 121 heating retrofits.

Woods encouraged homeowners to find out if they are eligible and apply for a grant by www. warmerkiwi­homes.govt.nz.

 ?? Photos / Supplied ?? The child healthy housing programme helps lowincome families in unhealthy houses such as this Hawke’s Bay house.
Photos / Supplied The child healthy housing programme helps lowincome families in unhealthy houses such as this Hawke’s Bay house.
 ??  ?? Alice Peacock says mould is “incredibly toxic” and can cause respirator­y issues and illnesses.
Alice Peacock says mould is “incredibly toxic” and can cause respirator­y issues and illnesses.

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