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United States

Record Number of Parents Miss Work as Respiratory Illnesses Spike in Kids (arstechnica.com) 101

Respiratory illnesses are raging this fall, slamming children particularly hard. From a report: Cases of influenza-like illnesses are off to a startlingly strong and early start this season. RSV -- respiratory syncytial (sin-SISH-uhl) virus -- continues to skyrocket. A stew of SARS-CoV-2 variants is still simmering in the background. And the rabble of usual cold-season viruses, such as rhinoviruses and enteroviruses, is also making the rounds. With the surge in infections, children's hospitals around the country have reported being at capacity or overwhelmed, as Ars has reported before.

But another effect of the crush of viruses is a squeeze on the workforce. As The Washington Post first reported Tuesday, the US broke its record last month for people missing work due to childcare problems -- such as having children home sick and childcare facilities or schools shuttered due to staffing shortages and sickness. In October, more than 100,000 employed Americans missed work for childcare-related problems, according to data from the US Bureau of Labor Statistics. That is more missing workers than in any other month in recent records, including the entirety of the COVID-19 pandemic, during which many childcare facilities and schools closed down for extended periods. At the height of pandemic-related shutdowns in 2020, the number of Americans missing work for childcare problems only reached the low 90,000s.

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Record Number of Parents Miss Work as Respiratory Illnesses Spike in Kids

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  • In fariness, I always blame the kids when I need time off. Oh hey, you scheduled a meeting and I totally forgot about it? I can either confess that I fucked up and forgot to check my calendar or I can just say my kid fell and I had to take them to urgent care....hence why I forgot to text you and tell you I couldn't make your bullshit meeting.

    Oh, this job fucking sucks? I can say I need to work from home and won't be available from noon to 4 for "personal time" while I go on an interview...or I can sa
  • That's why your are better off hiring non-breeders! I once asked the Tektronix HR person, "Why does Tektronix pay twice as much for healthcare for people with families than they do for single people like me?" Her response was, "Because we as a company have chosen to subsidize families!" In other words, no it isn't fair and... fuck you!
    • With men getting the same level of maternity leave as women now it's only getting worse.

    • by narcc ( 412956 )

      Thank you for voluntarily removing yourself from the gene pool! This is the single greatest contribution you could make the the future of the human race.

    • Even the government subsidizes kids. Mostly this is because the entire economy is based on continuous growth and would come crashing down like a lead balloon* if people stopped popping out enough kids.

      * I used this idiom on purpose, because it's actually possible to make a lead balloon float [youtube.com] - just as it is also technically possible to have an economy that doesn't require unending population growth.

    • Why does Tektronix pay twice as much for healthcare for people with families than they do for single people like me?

      When you are 80 and trying to collect social security you'll be damn glad for what kids there are today

  • This isn't exactly a bad thing as people in general work SICK way too much. You don't do any good to your friends, relatives, co-workers, schoolmates, everyone else in your social structure if you go out and are SICK. Parents SHOULD be able to keep their kids home if they're sick and actually be nurturing parents!! Why the heck are we enabling a society that needs us to keep cracking the whip on parents to work, have both work and make everything else nearly impossible to raise our collective future.
    • I think your post is getting at the main reason for the statistic, The threshold for skipping work has gone down. In the past most parents were married, and fewer moms worked, so if the kids got sick nobody skipped work. Of course from another perspective mom was skipping work every day of the year in the sense of not being employed outside the home. Now people just casually skip work and meetings all the time for personal needs. I agree it's probably an advancement. But it certainly is going to look bad o
  • by rsilvergun ( 571051 ) on Thursday November 17, 2022 @03:11PM (#63058748)
    has a good video on this. The current theory is that Covid did damage to children's immune system which is causing RSV to hit them harder.

    It is *not* "immunity debt". That has been debunked. Getting sick doesn't make your immune system stronger. If anything it can make things worse. Exposure to beneficial microbes is what helps your immune system. You don't want a "strong" immune system, you want a balanced one. A "strong" immune system is called "allergies" and in a worst case it can kill you.
    • by Roger W Moore ( 538166 ) on Thursday November 17, 2022 @04:13PM (#63058952) Journal

      Getting sick doesn't make your immune system stronger.

      True, but it does make your immune system better trained to rapidly fight off a new infection of the same virus either without getting ill or at least showing much milder symptoms. However, over time the preparations your immune system made to be ready to fight off another infection decrease which is why we keep having to get boosters for covid to keep reminding the immune system to keep its defences up.

      Now, if you remove someone from an environment where a particular virus is circulating for a year or two then their immune system may well start to drop its defences again that virus. Whether it does this depends on the virus - some vaccines give life-long immunity like the TB or measles vaccines others have far shorter effective times and you have to get boosters like tetantus, flu and covid.

      It does not mean that some of the issue may be due to Covid suppressing the immune system. However, as I understand it, our response to cold and flu viruses is like our response to covid i.e. not a long-lasting one so if we have had little to no exposure to these viruses for well over a year it seems likely that our immune systems will have lowered their defenses against them somewhat plus these viruses have had two years to mutate to get around our defences so I do not see how these effects can be neglected.

      • I agree. The first winter I moved to London was horrendous for colds, and when my first child started nursery I even managed to get hand foot and mouth along with endless weird respiratory bugs. Subsequent winters were much better. Itâ(TM)s obvious that the same thing is playing out after the disruptions from lockdowns/travel restrictions.

        rlsilvergun has been advocating for more lockdowns since the pandemic began. Heâ(TM)s just digging in this position further. I think the initial lockdowns were

        • when the vaccines hit. At this point I'm advocating for masking and vaccines because they work and they're safe. We still have 380 a day dying (7 day average) and it's likely to skyrocket due to low booster uptake. And again, a lot of those kids getting RSV are getting it because guys like you won't take basic precautions other countries have for years. This is almost certainly because political pundits you respect made it into a wedge issue to push your buttons with.

          How many kids are we gonna put in th
      • that was the point of the video. Basically exposure to beneficial microbes as child has been shown to help, and exposure to a specific disease triggers antibodies which also helps (assuming the virus doesn't kill you) but a) anti-body immunity wanes over time and b) the damage done by getting sick can and will make you more susceptible to other illnesses (and possible the same illness after immunity wanes).

        The immune system isn't "dropping it's defenses" if you're not getting the virus. The defenses are
  • Last two months alone, 3 kids, sick total 7 times. Two of those times school called and asked to come and pick them up. My youngest had to stay home a whole week due to exposures of HFM.
  • by Petersko ( 564140 ) on Thursday November 17, 2022 @03:28PM (#63058806)

    Now if we can get good strong wave of pertussis, and maybe a small-but-significant run of polio, we'll collectively remember why vaccines are good.

  • I had it the week before Halloween. While I am immune-compromised and 61, I also have normal IgG levels through IG replacement therapy. Coughing like you wouldn't believe. I've been off cough syrup for about a week now. It wasn't a lot of fun, though the afternoon naps were nice.

    I had to do a run of antibiotics as it was beginning to turn into a sinus infection - yes it is a virus, this is a normal progression for some people with primary immune deficiency.

Somebody ought to cross ball point pens with coat hangers so that the pens will multiply instead of disappear.

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