Houston Chronicle

Schools can reopen — if bars and gyms close

- By Helen Jenkins and William Hanage Jenkins is an epidemiolo­gist at Boston University. Hanage is an associate professor of epidemiolo­gy at the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health. This op-ed originally appeared in the Washington Post.

Schools are not a luxury item — they are part of the bedrock of society. They not only educate children, they also feed many of them. They provide a safer environmen­t than home for some kids, and they are a beating heart in many communitie­s.

Why did the pandemic force schools to close? The reasons are simple: If children can become infected, then they may be at risk of illness, and also could transmit the virus to others — their teachers, their families and their communitie­s.

The benefits to society of schools being open, though, are greater than the benefits from opening most other institutio­ns. Although we can mitigate transmissi­on within schools to some degree, the best way to ensure that schools can open — and stay open — is to keep community spread of the virus low. Overall, reopening leads to more transmissi­on, and right now, cases are ticking up across the South, as expected. That means activity in some other sectors of the economy will need to be reduced to preserve the education, feeding, socializat­ion and safety of our children — and the ability of parents to do their work. Schools should be prioritize­d.

It’s true that children are probably less likely to become infected if exposed — estimates for kids hover around half as likely to pick up an infection per contact compared with an adult. And young kids are much, much less likely to become severely ill with the virus than older age groups — riding in a car is much more dangerous. However, car crashes are not infectious, and children infected with the virus are. There is some evidence that children are less infectious — that they might not transmit the virus as readily as adults — as well as less likely to get sick, although this is not altogether clear.

Some tools to reduce that risk definitely work: distancing, hand-washing, mask use, testing and effective tracing and isolation of contacts if a case is found. Yet even as they plan for how to operate safely in person, school systems around the country are also preparing now for how to make online learning work well if they have to shut down again in the event of a large fall surge and extensive community transmissi­on that once again threatens to overwhelm hospitals.

We can avoid that, and keep schools open, if we shift our priorities.

If we want schools to open in a few months and stay open, we need to keep community transmissi­on low. The best way to do that is to suppress the spread of the virus.

So what are we all willing to give up to keep in-person education on the agenda? Can you forgo a night out at a bar or a trip to a casino? Can you give up dining inside a restaurant? What are you willing to give up to ensure that school openings don’t wind up pushing us over the edge? What are we willing to sacrifice? We need to decide where our priorities as a community lie, and in a way we can all support — whether we are ourselves parents, teachers or neither.

A single introducti­on is not a big deal, and a small outbreak can probably be halted with good infection control (with contact tracing, testing and isolating a subset of people). But once transmissi­on outside the school becomes high enough, it will lead to more introducti­ons into school, meaning that outbreaks become inevitable. And at that point, schools will be forced to close. If transmissi­on approaches the levels of March, then entire school districts will likely close again, and we will be back where we started. And in fall and winter, social distancing will be harder than it is now, and everyone will be spending a lot more time indoors, where transmissi­on increases.

The virus is still with us. That means all forms of reopening will increase transmissi­on to some degree, though how much each opening (schools, bars, dining at restaurant­s, etc.) contribute­s is unclear. The overall risk from schools could be significan­t, though, given the numbers of children and teachers, and the number of contacts children make with each other and their parents, grandparen­ts and other adults. We should work to keep that risk as low as possible and accommodat­e it.

Deciding exactly how to do that means tough decisions about what is most important. If our society is going to ask businesses to take the hit for schools, the government should support them financiall­y as much as possible, and it should also support those who lose their jobs as a result. But closing schools — and the high levels of community transmissi­on that will have caused those closures — will result in more unemployme­nt, as well as leaving children hungry and falling behind in their education. We are in the middle of a pandemic. We cannot have our cake and eat it, too. If we try, we might be left with no cake, and only ashes.

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