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School attendance guidance Scotland

11 replies

essex956 · 25/08/2022 10:43

Wondering if anyone had a link to anything official on the guidance re attendance at school in Scotland when a child tests positive (primary if it makes a difference)?

I know technically I can send my Dd back if she's feeling okay but school said guidance was to ideally keep her of 5 days and send her back once she's feeling better AND negative.

This is what I've followed but Dds dad is criticising me for keeping her off unnecessarily. He hasn't spoken to school and seems to think I'm making it up as she should be back by now

OP posts:
dementedpixie · 25/08/2022 10:46

Thought it was 3 days for children and 5 for adults

dementedpixie · 25/08/2022 10:59

Our school sent this letter from Jason Leitch:

As I’ve tried to do throughout the pandemic, I wanted to share the latest advice about the way we are managing Covid-19.

From Sunday 1 May, public health advice will change to a ‘stay at home’ message and replace self-isolation for people who have symptoms or have tested positive for Covid-19.

As a result, people who have symptoms of Covid-19 and who have a fever or are too unwell to carry out normal activities will be asked to stay at home while they are unwell or have a fever. They will no longer be advised to take a PCR test.

These changes will also see testing for the general population and most contact tracing end
on 30 April.

What this means in practice is that children and young people (those aged 18 and under) with mild symptoms such as a runny nose, sore throat, or slight cough - but who are otherwise well - do not need to stay at home and can continue to attend education settings.

They should only stay at home if they are unwell and have a high temperature. They can go back to school, college or childcare, and resume normal activities when they no longer have a fever and they feel well enough to attend.

This guidance differs slightly to that for adults, and reflects the fact that children and young people generally have a higher likelihood than adults of regular instances of respiratory symptoms from non-Covid illnesses.

Further information on the stay at home guidance and measures you can take to limit the spread of Covid-19 can be found at Changes from 1 May - Coronavirus (COVID-19): staying at home - gov.scot (www.gov.scot) and from 1 May on nhsinform.scot/covid19.

I hope that everyone has settled back into a normal routine following the Spring break, and best wishes to all those sitting exams in the next few weeks.

And this is the link the letter talks about:

www.nhsinform.scot/covid19

dementedpixie · 25/08/2022 11:00

www.nhsinform.scot/covid19

dementedpixie · 25/08/2022 11:02

They shouldnt be asking for a negative test
Why did you test anyway as its not a requirement either?

essex956 · 25/08/2022 11:07

I initially tested because she had a really high fever and I wanted to rule out anything more serious

OP posts:
essex956 · 25/08/2022 11:35

dementedpixie · 25/08/2022 10:59

Our school sent this letter from Jason Leitch:

As I’ve tried to do throughout the pandemic, I wanted to share the latest advice about the way we are managing Covid-19.

From Sunday 1 May, public health advice will change to a ‘stay at home’ message and replace self-isolation for people who have symptoms or have tested positive for Covid-19.

As a result, people who have symptoms of Covid-19 and who have a fever or are too unwell to carry out normal activities will be asked to stay at home while they are unwell or have a fever. They will no longer be advised to take a PCR test.

These changes will also see testing for the general population and most contact tracing end
on 30 April.

What this means in practice is that children and young people (those aged 18 and under) with mild symptoms such as a runny nose, sore throat, or slight cough - but who are otherwise well - do not need to stay at home and can continue to attend education settings.

They should only stay at home if they are unwell and have a high temperature. They can go back to school, college or childcare, and resume normal activities when they no longer have a fever and they feel well enough to attend.

This guidance differs slightly to that for adults, and reflects the fact that children and young people generally have a higher likelihood than adults of regular instances of respiratory symptoms from non-Covid illnesses.

Further information on the stay at home guidance and measures you can take to limit the spread of Covid-19 can be found at Changes from 1 May - Coronavirus (COVID-19): staying at home - gov.scot (www.gov.scot) and from 1 May on nhsinform.scot/covid19.

I hope that everyone has settled back into a normal routine following the Spring break, and best wishes to all those sitting exams in the next few weeks.

And this is the link the letter talks about:

www.nhsinform.scot/covid19

Thanks so much. The school basically said that 5 days was their guidance/preference but I could send her back earlier by law

OP posts:
dementedpixie · 25/08/2022 11:38

The link I gave (the one that actually works) says

If a child or young person aged 18 or under has a positive coronavirus test result, they should stay at home and avoid contact with other people for 3 days after the day they took the test or from the day their symptoms started (whichever was earliest), if they can. Children and young people tend to be infectious for less time than adults.

essex956 · 25/08/2022 11:42

Yeah I read that but now. It just doesn't match the schools preference

Tbh I'm comfortable with what the school suggested and she's not been 100% back to normal.

It's the criticism from my ex that's got me annoyed

OP posts:
dementedpixie · 25/08/2022 11:45

If she's still unwell then keep her off
Hope she feels better soon

Jules912 · 25/08/2022 12:00

If school want her to stay off and you're happy with that I'd ignore what anyone else says. Only thing I might be wary of is my DD got pulled up on attendance last year as they'd counted the entire time she was off with Covid ( and she had a couple of other illnesses).

JanglyBeads · 25/08/2022 13:07

Has the school put the guidance in writing? If so send that to your ex.

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