In reply to: That should not have been the hypothesis needing refutation posted by NavyJoe
I'm not fine keeping kids out of school and extracurricular activities and shutting down large portions of the economy while we confirm what seems an almost certainty. The goal is to reduce the risks to an acceptable level, not to 0, and I feel like we've done that.
Opening up the vaccine to all is awesome, but it will take weeks or months for that to reduce spread.
Even if we could somehow vaccinate everyone tomorrow, we'd be 14 days out from partial protection and 4-5 weeks from full protection. Reality is that this will be staggered, and we have to get enough of the population on board.
I thought this discussion was about vaccinated people continuing to wear masks to prevent spread. Not about keeping kids out of school or business restrictions.
School districts and the local governments that regulate business are going to be influenced by what the CDC says.
I don't see how a recommendation to continue wearing masks becomes a recommendation to shut down schools or businesses.
They've issued guidance on those issues separately.
...we are, with the school districts planning for Hybrid Learning next year.
(or more specifically, a local school district issue) and not a CDC/Fauci issue?
Or are ther preparing for the possibility of hybrid learning because there's the possibility that herd immunity will not happen by fall?
Or that there are still parents who will not be comfortable sending their unvaccinated children to school, and those kids need to get some sort of education as well?
My kids' district here in IL went back full last week (3 days after I contracted COVID, unfortunately, so my kids are still in isolation after I passed it to them), but there are still kids that are full remote, and there are still accommodations being made for kids', like mine, that are in quarantine or isolation.
Next week can't come soon enough.
If the CDC were truly concerned with this, they wouldn't have reversed their stance on vaccinated people traveling or meeting in groups. This is an overly conservative approach that will do more harm than good.
They are recommending that fully vaccinated people can meet with other fully vaccinated people OR small groups of people from a single household that are low risk.
Those are very different situations from a large public setting from a standpoint of virus spread.
The travel recommendation is new to me. I didn't realize anyone was barred from domestic travel.
The CDC says vaccinated people can travel, do not need to self-quarantine, etc.
...then there isn't much risk, is there?
But that doesn't account for all the other interactions one has while moving beyond their bubble.