Families of young children with Covid-19 may have to self-isolate for 17 days



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Some families may have to restrict their movements for 17 days if a young child in the home tests positive for Covid-19, according to new HSE guidelines.

All household members, along with other children in the same group at school, are considered close contacts when a child tests positive, according to the revised guidelines from HSE’s Health Protection Surveillance Center.

Such contacts must restrict their movements for 14 days after the last exposure to the case, states the guide. However, this period increases to 17 days from the onset of symptoms in the index case “if the child with Covid-19 cannot be isolated at home and there is a risk of continued exposure.”

Any decision on whether a home can be self-insulated will be made based on a public health assessment.

The guidelines apply to children older than three months and younger than 13 years. Doctors acknowledge that young children may have a difficult time complying with the rules of distancing and hygiene necessary to prevent the spread of Covid-19.

Classmates of the child who tests positive, who are not in the same group, can continue to attend school, but their symptoms will be monitored, according to the guidelines.

Reduction

This occurs when the period during which adults with Covid-19 must isolate themselves is reduced from 14 days to 10.

Under the new guidelines, patients who test positive for the virus are advised to self-isolate for “a minimum of 10 days” from the onset of symptoms, or 10 days from the test date if they are asymptomatic. They should also go five days without fever.

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