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  • Survey finds little disruption with short school closure

    Survey finds little disruption with short school closure

    Lisa Schnirring Staff Writer

    May 29, 2008 (CIDRAP News) ? A survey of North Carolina families affected by a 10-day school closure due to a sharp rise in influenza-related absences found that the measure didn't cause families major hardships, but many did not heed a recommendation to avoid large gatherings.
    The findings by researchers at the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and the North Carolina Department of Health and Human Services were published yesterday as an early online article in Emerging Infectious Diseases (EID).
    School closures are among the nonpharmaceutical interventions that public health experts hope could mitigate the effects of a flu pandemic. Few studies have gauged the negative effects of school closures, which could include conflicts with parents' work schedules, forced changes in childcare arrangements, and a lack of meals for children who depend on federally subsidized school breakfast and lunch programs.
    Up close to a school closure
    The authors of the EID report seized a relatively rare opportunity to study the effects of a school closure in November 2006, when officials from a rural school district in western North Carolina canceled school for 10 days after a widespread influenza B outbreak struck many students and staff.
    The day before officials closed the schools, 17% of children in the school district were sick along with 10% of staff members. Officials said they closed the schools because of a shortage of staff.
    On Nov 2, officials closed all nine Yancey County schools through Nov 10. The county health department offered vaccination clinics and issued a reverse 911 call advising residents to avoid large gatherings, wash their hands frequently, cover their coughs, and stay away from those who were ill.
    Researchers contacted a random sample of households by phone from Nov 16 through 18, according to the report. Using a standard questionnaire, they asked about children's activities during the closure, special child-care arrangements that were needed, how the closure affected work and home routines, and parents' or guardians' opinions regarding the closure. Families were also asked about children's flu and hospitalization risks and recent flu-like illnesses.
    Over the 3-day survey period, 220 households completed the questionnaires. The sample covered 9.4% of all children younger than 18 in the county. Thirty seven (17%) of the households were headed by just one adult, which is lower than the national rate of 27%. Children from 87 (41%) households received free or reduced-cost lunches, about the same as the national average of 37.8%, the authors reported.
    Minimal impact, but new concerns
    The researchers found that 89% (195) of households visited at least one public place during the school closure interval; about half of them had traveled outside the county. Sites varied by age and illness status. Older children were more likely to visit fast-food restaurants and attend parties, and younger children were more likely to visit grocery stores.
    Among adults in the households, 72% (315) were employed outside the home. Of the 315 employed adults, 24% (76) missed 1 or more days of work from Oct 23 through the survey date, nearly half because of their own illness. Fourteen of the 76 (18%), all of whom were school employees, missed work because of the school closure.
    Most (76%) households reported that someone was regularly available during the day to look after children. Twenty-two (10%) said they had to make special child-care arrangements, such as sending children to grandparents, taking them to work, or using child-care programs.
    When asked about the decision to close schools, 92% (201) of households said the move was appropriate. Most felt they had enough time to prepare for the closure.
    The authors concluded that the school closure didn't cause major inconveniences for the families that took part in the survey; however, they said pandemic planners should be aware that most families didn't heed warnings to avoid public gatherings.
    "Lastly, the effect of school closure on work absenteeism and childcare expenditures appeared to be minimal in this community," they wrote.
    Lessons for pandemic planners?
    However, they pointed out that the Yancey County results might not be generalizable to other locales. Yancey County is in the Blue Ridge Mountains and often copes with weather-related school closures. Also, the county had a below-average proportion of single-parent households, which could have made it easier for families to adjust to changing child-care needs.
    The researchers also acknowledged that their findings run counter to a couple of other studies that have shown that substantial numbers of adults miss work to take care of sick children during the winter cold and flu season.
    "Results might also have been different if schools were closed for a longer period or if a more clinically severe strain of influenza were present," they wrote.
    Jeffrey Duchin, MD, chief of communicable disease control for Seattle King County Public Health in Washington, told CIDRAP News that the study paints a picture of how families might cope with a short school closure in response to an influenza outbreak. "We don't know, however, how effective the closure was in preventing the spread of influenza either among students or in the surrounding community," he said.
    Though the finding that the majority of children visited public places despite warnings is worrying, Duchin said, a larger concern is how families and communities could cope with a 6- to 12-week school closure that might be warranted in a pandemic scenario.
    Johnson AJ, Moore ZS, Edelson PJ, et al. Household response to school closure resulting from outbreak of influenza B, North Carolina. Emerg Infect Dis 2008 Jul;14(7) [Full text]


  • #2
    Re: Survey finds little disruption with short school closure

    "a larger concern is how families and communities could cope with a 6- to 12-week school closure that might be warranted in a pandemic scenario."

    Easy. First, the above way of thinking is properly for usual, not in a serious infective pandemic times.
    Second, lets the folks, the kids, and the society, to imagin that this 12-week period of school closure is a start of a summer holliday period, and this few months would became a year's school holliday break.

    "but many did not heed a recommendation to avoid large gatherings."

    Start to consider coercitive measures as police/MP to reinforce this "recommendation", or skip this recommendation and go to a: "beware / no gatherings allowed".

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: Survey finds little disruption with short school closure

      is it just me or can others here make sense of such headlines , such articles ?
      What's "little disruption" ?

      Can we estimate the negative impact of 10 day's school closure in NC in $ per child ?
      Does the article suggest such an estimate ? How to find it inbetween all these words ?

      If it's less than the teacher's salary for that perios plus the school-maintainance cost,
      then we schould regularly include these closures !
      I'm interested in expert panflu damage estimates
      my current links: http://bit.ly/hFI7H ILI-charts: http://bit.ly/CcRgT

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: Survey finds little disruption with short school closure

        "If it's less than the teacher's salary for that perios plus the school-maintainance cost,
        then we schould regularly include these closures !"


        "The Wall", Pink Floyd

        Yes, today's so much years of learning are not good for the spirit, nor for the body ...

        Comment


        • #5
          Re: Survey finds little disruption with short school closure

          > We dont need no education.

          double negation ??

          > We dont need no thought control.

          get tinfoil hat

          > No dark sarcasm in the classroom.

          but scientific enlighting

          > Teacher, leave those kids alone.
          > Hey, teacher, leave those kids alone!

          they can learn over the internet

          > All in all its just another brick in the wall.
          > All in all youre just another brick in the wall.

          ?
          I'm interested in expert panflu damage estimates
          my current links: http://bit.ly/hFI7H ILI-charts: http://bit.ly/CcRgT

          Comment


          • #6
            Re: Survey finds little disruption with short school closure

            Originally posted by gsgs View Post
            > We dont need no education.
            double negation ??

            > We dont need no thought control.
            get tinfoil hat

            > No dark sarcasm in the classroom.
            but scientific enlighting

            > Teacher, leave those kids alone.
            > Hey, teacher, leave those kids alone!
            they can learn over the internet

            > All in all its just another brick in the wall.
            > All in all youre just another brick in the wall.
            ?
            Gut gsgs,

            There in the lyrics, Pink forgot the comma:

            "We don't need,
            no education.

            We don't need,
            no thought control."

            And, as you said:
            > Teacher, leave those kids alone.
            > Hey, teacher, leave those kids alone!
            they can learn over the internet.

            If not, because internet would be down, they have plenty of dusty books from their parents ...

            > All in all its just another brick in the wall.
            > All in all youre just another brick in the wall.
            ?

            Well, with the remaining 6 bilion humans, maybe we can have other shapes too, not only a brick ...
            (I must mail David ...)

            Comment


            • #7
              Re: Survey finds little disruption with short school closure

              IMHO the point is moot. During a pandemic with high CFR school buildings in many communities may be needed as emergency clinics to relieve the over crowding in hospitals.

              The article is good in that it may provide the population in the area it was published in a first step in thinking about the possible ramifications of a pandemic on their everyday lives. The practices of social distancing and quarantine are no longer part of main culture in many parts of the developed world. Integrating them back into popular culture and practice is going to take some adjustment. Recently I talked to an acquaintance who "could not imagine" not going out into public for the length time it took to allow a pandemic flu wave to pass.
              We were put on this earth to help and take care of one another.

              Comment


              • #8
                Re: Survey finds little disruption with short school closure

                Originally posted by Amish Country View Post
                ... Recently I talked to an acquaintance who "could not imagine" not going out into public for the length time it took to allow a pandemic flu wave to pass.
                I think that we will encounter many things during a moderate to severe 'flu pandemic that we cannot have imagined.

                This forum helps us imagine (and prepare) together.
                Separate the wheat from the chaff

                Comment


                • #9
                  Re: Survey finds little disruption with short school closure

                  Household Responses to School Closure Resulting from Outbreak of Influenza B, North Carolina
                  April J. Johnson,* Zack S. Moore,*† Paul J. Edelson,* Lynda Kinnane,‡ Megan Davies,*† David K. Shay*, Amanda Balish,* Meg McCarron,* Lenee Blanton,* Lyn Finelli,* Francisco Averhoff,* Joseph Bresee,* Jeffrey Engel,† and Anthony Fiore* *Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, Georgia, USA; †North Carolina Department of Health and
                  Human Services, Raleigh, North Carolina, USA; and ‡Toe River Health District, Burnsville, North Carolina, USA

                  School closure is a proposed strategy for reducing influenza transmission during a pandemic.

                  Few studies have assessed how families respond to closures, or whether other interactions during closure could reduce this strategy’s effect.

                  Questionnaires were administered to 220 households (438 adults and
                  355 children) with school-age children in a North Carolina county during an influenza B virus outbreak that resulted in school closure.

                  Closure was considered appropriate by 201 (91&#37 households.

                  No adults missed work to solely provide childcare, and only 22 (10%) households required special childcare arrangements; 2 households incurred additional costs.

                  Eighty-nine percent of children visited at least 1 public location during the closure despite county recommendations to avoid large gatherings.

                  Although behavior and attitudes might differ during a pandemic, these results suggest short-term closure did not cause substantial hardship for parents.

                  Pandemic planning guidance should address the potential for transmission in public areas during school closure.
                  -

                  ------

                  Comment

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