Horne answers inquiries about schools and COVID
- Wed, Jul 31 2024 •
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- News
For immediate release: July 31, 2024
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Horne answers inquiries about schools and COVID
Notes health agencies now treat COVID as common respiratory virus
Responding to an inquiry about the status of COVID cases in Arizona and any potential effect on schools, state Superintendent of Public Instruction Tom Horne says public health agencies now consider COVID to be a common respiratory virus and schools should operate normally.
Horne stated, “I have been asked about how schools should address a recent surge in COVID cases in Arizona. My unequivocal answer, based on guidance from national and state public health agencies, is that schools absolutely need to operate normally because the threat of COVID, especially among school-age children is extremely minimal. By contrast, extended closures of schools during the pandemic had a debilitating and long-lasting effect on learning. We see that in lower test scores nationally and the cost to the education of millions of children is incalculable.”
The Centers for Disease Control guidance on respiratory viruses now describes COVID as a “common respiratory viral illness such as RSV or the flu.” Former Arizona Department of Health Services Director Will Humble was quoted in a recent news item as saying COVID is “working its way into becoming a common cold.” The current state Department of Health Services website states that both that agency and the CDC “recognize that students benefit mentally, emotionally, and physically from in-person instruction.”
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