Albuquerque Journal

WILL WE GET IT RIGHT?

School reopening – what did the CDC really say?

- BY RICHARD SKOLNIK GLOBAL HEALTH LECTURER AND AUTHOR

Much of the U.S. is excited, if not thrilled, by media reports a CDC study (recently) released said that “schools are safe and can reopen.” Despite the excitement, this is actually not what CDC said.

The CDC study did report that schools in the United States have generally not been associated with the kind of viral spread that one sees in congregate settings like nursing homes and highdensit­y worksites.

However, the study also said that schools can safely reopen only when they have fulfilled several important conditions:

The first is communitie­s must reduce the spread of the virus. This should be done through measures like limiting indoor dining at restaurant­s, closing bars and gyms, and continuing to engage in maskwearin­g and social distancing. Vaccinatin­g as large a share of the population as rapidly as possible, of course, will also reduce transmissi­on of the virus.

The second is schools must continue to work ■ hard to reduce spread within classrooms and other school facilities. Mask-wearing and social distancing must continue. In-person learning also requires sound hand-washing and hygiene practices, good ventilatio­n of classrooms, and expanded testing of teachers, staff and students.

In addition, the report indicated some schoolbase­d activities, such as many sports, are associated with increased risk of transmitti­ng SARS-CoV-2. Thus, some extracurri­cular activities must continue to be limited until the rate of transmissi­on in local communitie­s has decreased to a much lower level.

When it comes to our schools, the New Mexico Public Education Department released Jan. 26 some new guidelines for school reopening. These appear to fit well with the emerging evidence and with CDC guidelines.

As the new CDC director said Jan. 27, the key to safely reopening schools is to reduce transmissi­on of the virus. Over the past seven days, Los Alamos saw an average daily number of new cases of 24 per 100,000 population. This is substantia­lly higher than the rate at which some leading epidemiolo­gists suggested earlier in the outbreak was safe for school reopening.

The CDC study was not a license to open schools immediatel­y. Rather, it provides a set of actions that we must take if we want to reopen our schools safely. Achieving this goal will require that every member of our community continues to take measures that reduce the risk of new infections. If not, school “reopening” will be followed, in short order, by school closings.

Richard Skolnik is the former director for Health, Nutrition and Population for the South Asia region of the World Bank. He was also a lecturer in global health at The George Washington University and Yale University. He is the author of Global Health 101 and the instructor for the Coursera/Yale course Essentials of Global Health. He lives in White Rock.

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