Today’s Solutions: May 04, 2024

The continued latest Covid-19 surge has made for a rocky and uncertain back-to-school season, but the San Francisco Department of Public Health is celebrating the first weeks of school with no Covid-19 outbreaks since students returned to classrooms on August 16.

An outbreak is defined by the public health department as “three or more cases in non-related households in which the source of infection occurred at the school, and not another setting.” So far, San Francisco schools have reported only 227 cases out of 52,000 students and nearly 10,000 staff with the vast majority occurring outside of schools.

Nationally, there was a ten percent increase in pediatric Covid-19 cases from August 19 to September 2, highlighting the risk of the Delta variant to children too young to be vaccinated. San Francisco’s health department noted that the low case numbers among students were due to the fact that 90 percent of children ages 12 to 17 in San Francisco schools are fully vaccinated and that all teachers and students over 24 months are required to wear masks on school grounds.

Solutions News Source Print this article
More of Today's Solutions

Here are some easy recipes for making your own hand sanitizer

By now you must surely be aware that washing your hands clean is necessary to keep you and others protected during the pandemic. You’ve ...

Read More

The case for shifting to a four-day workweek for post-pandemic life

At The Optimist Daily, we’re putting a lot of focus on what the world can do after the pandemic to create a healthier, more ...

Read More

So your compost has mold? What it means and what to do about it

So you’ve set up a functioning compost system in your backyard. First things first, congratulations! But how do you know if your compost is ...

Read More

Mapping out the Milky Way’s snacks gives clues into dark matter

In our galaxy’s galactic halo, there are 12 streams of stars orbiting. These burning balls of gas are actually being torn apart and their ...

Read More