US parents hid that kids had covid, new study says

US parents hid that kids had covid, new study says


The study authors say quarantine guidelines were ignored, which may have contributed to the spread of the coronavirus




Data from a study published in JAMA network open on Monday (6) with the parents of WE point out that they were dishonest about their children having covid or ignored testing and quarantine guidelines.

The study did not employ random sampling; parents were recruited from a panel of volunteers and 70% of respondents were female. While that doesn’t appear to be demographically representative, such behavior does provide clues about the spread of the coronavirus, according to researchers from US and UK universities.

Among the most common justifications for choosing not to disclose the covid status of one’s children are the right to “exercise personal freedom as parents” or for children to “resume normal life”.

the state of vaccination of children to allow them to participate in the activities has been omitted. In order for the children not to miss school or for the parents not to lose their jobs, covid has not been reported.

According to Andrea Gurmankin Levy, a psychology professor at Middlesex Community College in Connecticut and one of the report’s lead authors, the pandemic has created a stress for everyone, especially for parents.

Such behavior, according to the researcher, suggests that we need to “do a better job of providing support mechanisms, such as paid sick leave for family illness, so that parents don’t feel their only options are to be dishonest about whether they their child has covid-19.” or ask your child to break the quarantine rules.”

Additionally, the study revealed that some parents misrepresented their children’s ages to vaccinate them before they entered the eligible stage for coronavirus vaccines.

According to research by the Kaiser Family Foundation, as of December 2022, 42 percent of children ages 12 to 17 and 61 percent of children ages 5 to 11 had not been vaccinated in the United States.

An earlier study of pandemic behavior, completed by the same researchers, found that many Americans misled others about their COVID status or adhered to public health guidelines. Researchers in the latest study said those findings offer lessons for future pandemics.

In the US, more than 1.1 million people have died from covid, with more than 103 million cases reported.

Source: Terra

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