Flu Information

When to Keep Your Child Home During Cold and Flu Season

Sometimes it can be difficult for a parent to decide whether to send children to school when they wake up with early symptoms of an illness or complain that they do not feel well. In general, during cold and flu season, unless your child is significantly ill, the best place for your child is in school.

Remind and show your children to discard used tissues promptly, not to share personal items, to cover their mouths when they cough or sneeze, to keep their hands away from their face, and to wash hands thoroughly and often with soap and warm water. Suggest that they silently sing the “Happy Birthday” song twice while washing their hands.

There are some situations in which it is best to plan on keeping your child home for a day to rest or to arrange for an appointment with your health care provider. The following are a few such situations that warrant watching and possibly conferring with your health care provider:

  1. Persistent fever greater than 100.4° orally, including a fever that requires control with medication, such as Tylenol
  2. Child is too sleepy or ill from an illness, such as vomiting and/or diarrhea, to profit from sitting in class all day
  3. Significant cough that makes a child feel uncomfortable or disrupts the class
  4. Sore throat that is severe, accompanied by fever and/or feeling ill,  OR after known exposure to a confirmed case of Streptococcal throat infection
  5. Honey-crusted sores around the nose or mouth or rash on other body parts that might be impetigo; OR a rash in various stages including boils, sores and bumps that may be chicken pox; OR a significant rash accompanied by other symptoms of illness such as fever
  6. Red, runny eyes that distract the child from learning
  7. Large amount of discolored nasal discharge, especially if accompanied by facial pain or headache
  8. Severe ear pain or drainage from the ear
  9. Severe headache, especially if accompanied by fever
  10. Any condition that you think may be serious or contagious to others.

Whenever there is an outbreak of a specific contagious infection, the school sends out a notice to alert you to watch for any symptoms. If your child starts to develop symptoms, it is important that you alert your own health care provider that your child had possible exposure. Be sure to ask your provider when it is safe for your child to return to school, both for your child’s health and for the health of the rest of the school.

Finally, if you know your child is still running a fever, it is not a good idea to give them Tylenol and send them to school because as soon as the medicine wears off, you are apt to get a call from the school nurse asking you to leave work and come to pick up your feverish child. It is better to let them stay home in bed with a fever and take their medications at home until they are off all medicines and ready for a full day in school.

If you find a pattern of your child asking to stay home from school, especially if they are falling behind or appear anxious by the thought of attending school, or if there does not appear to be any obvious physical symptoms, it may be a good idea to contact your school nurse and/or your health care provider to discuss your concerns.

Remember, whenever you keep your child home from school, please call the attendance office in advance of the start of the school day and leave a message that your child will be absent.


Contact

M.C. Smith Elementary School – June Boucher, RN: 518-828-4360, ext. 1118

Hudson Junior High School – Stephanie Haigh, LPN: 518-828-4360, ext. 8311

Hudson Senior High School – Pierpont Geer, RN: 518-828-4360, ext. 3107