Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
'Back To School' Will Be Far From Back To Normal: Educators, Health Experts Raise Concerns
As the Trump administration pushes full steam ahead to force schools to resume in-person education, public health experts warn that a one-size-fits-all reopening could drive infection and death rates even higher. They鈥檙e urging a more cautious approach, which many local governments and school districts are already pursuing. But U.S. Education Secretary Betsy DeVos doubled down on President Donald Trump鈥檚 insistence that kids can safely return to the classroom. (Tanner, 7/12)
As school districts across the United States consider whether and how to restart in-person classes, their challenge is complicated by a pair of fundamental uncertainties: No nation has tried to send children back to school with the virus raging at levels like America鈥檚, and the scientific research about transmission in classrooms is limited. (Belluck, Mandavilli and Carey, 7/11)
Three school teachers in the small eastern Arizona community of Winkelman tested positive for the coronavirus last month and one of them died, according to a Phoenix television station. ABC15 reported Sunday that Kimberley Byrd shared a classroom with two other teachers at Leonor Hambly K-8. (7/12)
The California Teachers Association, one of the largest and most powerful unions in the country ... is insisting on prolonging distance learning instead of forcing its army of more than 300,000 educators back into schools. 鈥淲e hope we don鈥檛 have to go there, but if it comes to it, we do retain the right to refuse to work under unsafe conditions,鈥 said David Fisher, president of the Sacramento City Teachers Association. (Mays, 7/11)
When Governor Charlie Baker released guidelines for reopening schools, one measure seemed to come out of left field: In an effort to get as many students as possible back into their classrooms this fall, he would allow schools to practice only 3 feet of social distancing instead of the standard 6 feet, sparking a passionate debate across the state. (Vaznis, 7/12)
Health officials have put a mobile COVID-19 testing station outside a suburban Chicago high school as the area sees an increase in cases among younger residents, a trend that has happened elsewhere in the country. (7/12)
In other education news 鈥
About 60 U.S. universities on Sunday filed a brief supporting a lawsuit by two others, seeking to block a Trump administration rule barring foreign students from remaining in the country if educational institutions don鈥檛 hold in-person classes this fall. (7/13)