COVID-19: WHO issues guidelines for school reopening

The World Health Organisation (WHO) on Wednesday, said schools should only close as a last resort while research is under way into whether the new coronavirus variants affect children differently.

The debate on shutting schools during the Covid-19 pandemic has been revived by the emergence of more contagious virus mutations, The Punch reports.

The WHO said research had begun looking at the factors that may put children at risk, the long-term health effects on those infected, and the impact of new variants of SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes Covid-19 disease.

“The arrival in late 2020 of new more transmissible variants of SARS-CoV-2 requires additional analysis by sex and age to measure how and if the new variants impact children differently,” it said.

“If it is found that children are more affected, public health social measures may need to be adapted.”

Here is a summary of the WHO’s special focus on Covid-19’s impact on children and schools, issued Wednesday:

“School closure should be implemented as a last resort, be temporary and only at a local level in areas with intense transmission.”

Authorities should check for new guidance, “particularly with respect to the appearance of new and possibly more transmissible variants”.

In low-transmission areas, schools are unlikely to drive infection; in areas with widespread transmission, protective measures in schools are essential.

Schools need outbreak prevention and management plans, including on ventilation, hand and surface cleaning, communication with parents, mask use and physical distancing.

Children aged 12 and older “should wear a mask under the same conditions as adults”. Physical distancing can be achieved by limiting class sizes, alternating shifts and limiting mixing of classes.

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