logo
The Disaster of School Closures Should Have Been Foreseen

The Disaster of School Closures Should Have Been Foreseen

Yahoo17-04-2025
Of the many mistakes made in the COVID era, none were as glaring as prolonged school closures. The damages go beyond loss of learning, a dire consequence in its own right: Millions of families, both children and parents, still carry the scars of stress, depression, and isolation.
The closures began at a time of understandable panic, but that was only the beginning of the story. On February 25, 2020, Nancy Messonnier, the director of the CDC's National Center for Immunization and Respiratory Diseases, led a press conference to address the developing coronavirus crisis. Messonnier warned the public that, without vaccines, non-pharmaceutical interventions—things like business closures or social-distancing guidelines—would be the most important tools in the country's response. 'What is appropriate for one community seeing local transmission won't necessarily be appropriate for a community where no local transmission has occurred,' she said. The school closures that would be implemented the following month—and that endured through the end of the school year in nearly all of the roughly 13,800 school districts in the United States, in regions that had wildly different infection levels—showed this directive was not followed.
At the time of the initial closures, in mid-March, COVID was spreading quickly, but large areas in the U.S. were absent any known cases. Still, to the extent that a planned response to influenza was an appropriate universal pandemic guide, these closures were aligned with the CDC's most recent update to its pandemic playbook, released in 2017. According to that document, an initial two-week closure of schools would be sufficient to fulfill a first objective of buying authorities time to assess the severity of the pandemic. Given the news being reported of care rationing in northern-Italian hospitals, following this plan was not unreasonable—and, as part of broader stay-at-home orders, it may have had some effect on disease transmission.
'Italy spooked us,' Jennifer Nuzzo, director of the Pandemic Center at the Brown University School of Public Health, told me. 'We did not want to be Italy. The governors all saw China and Italy lock down and decided to follow their example.'
Indeed, had China not locked down, perhaps the rest of the world might not have done so either. China, governed by an authoritarian regime that rules the country with tremendous top-down power, does not share the same attitude toward personal liberties as Western democracies. And neither the CDC's pandemic playbook nor the pre-2020 consensus within the public-health field favored a lockdown of society of the breadth that we would experience. On a countrywide scale—from both an epidemiological perspective and a human-rights perspective—closing all nonessential business, closing all schools, prohibiting most social interactions and nonessential travel, and so on, was not considered feasible or wise. Because we initially lacked the ability to test, Nuzzo said, shutting schools, along with other facets of society, did make sense at first. The problem, in Nuzzo's mind, was not closing down in March; it was that there was no plan beyond that. By 'no plan,' Nuzzo was referring to two interrelated problems: all the potential harms of closures, and the challenge of unwinding interventions after they'd been implemented.
In Messonnier's press conference, she mentioned the CDC's 2017 pandemic report directly, said that school closures were part of the plan, and recognized that they were likely to be associated with unwanted consequences such as missed work and loss of income. 'I understand this whole situation may seem overwhelming and that disruption to everyday life may be severe,' she advised. 'You should think about what you would do for child care if schools or day cares close.' There was no mention of how the government might aid families during school closures, or, for example, about what a single parent with a job as a cashier in a grocery store and a 4-year-old at home was supposed to do. Rather, in just one line amid a lengthy speech, people were told to simply 'think about' it. To government officials and many others at the time, this was a regrettable but entirely reasonable approach—a presumed temporary loss of wages and child-care issues were lower-order concerns compared with the coming onslaught of a pandemic.
Yet what was positioned as a secondary issue—a mere abstraction, warranting just a brief mention—led to catastrophic consequences for millions of children, and their families. A year later, my kids, along with tens of millions of other students, were still trudging through remote learning, either as their exclusive form of schooling or through so-called hybrid schedules during which they could attend classes only part time. (Meanwhile, bars, restaurants, and all manner of other businesses had long since reopened, as had many private schools.) Teachers in much of the country had been prioritized for vaccines—making them eligible for protection before some other, more vulnerable populations—yet schools in half the country still weren't open full time, and in many places weren't open at all.
While federal public-health officials made recommendations regarding schools, the actual closures were carried out at the state and local levels, in response to misplaced public fears and aggressive campaigning by teachers' unions. Randi Weingarten, the high-profile head of the American Federation of Teachers, said in a February 8, 2021, New York Times article that she hoped things would be 'as normal as possible' by the following fall. Class-action lawsuits in multiple states had been filed on behalf of children with special needs on the claim that the conditions of IDEA—a federal law that requires certain services (such as physical and occupational therapy, supplemental aids and equipment, etc.) for children with disabilities—were not being met in remote-learning models.
[Read: Where all the missing students?]
Opinion pieces with titles such as 'Remote School Is a Nightmare. Few in Power Care,' had been appearing in major news outlets since the previous summer. Working parents, especially mothers, were dropping out of the workforce in staggering numbers because of child-care obligations during the pandemic. An analysis by the U.S. Chamber of Commerce found that nearly 60 percent of parents who had left the workforce had done so for this reason. The psychic toll on parents and children was never—and can never be—calculated. It won't show up in statistics, but it was real for millions of families. And millions of children, especially those without resources for tutors or parents to oversee them during the day, were losing ground with their academics. Worse, they were suffering from isolation, frustration, and, for an increasing number of them, depression from spending their days alone in front of an electronic screen. Untold numbers of other children became 'lost,' having dropped out of school entirely. Those in power who advocated for school closures were not adequately prepared for these consequences, which were still pervasive a full year into the pandemic.
But they should have been.
The damaging effects of school interruptions were not unforeseen. They were explicitly warned about in the academic literature. Exhibit A is a 2006 paper called 'Disease Mitigation Measures in the Control of Pandemic Influenza,' in the journal Biosecurity and Bioterrorism, written by Nuzzo; her mentor (and global eminence on disease-outbreak policies), D. A. Henderson; and two others. 'There is simply too little experience to predict how a 21st century population would respond, for example, to the closure of all schools for periods of many weeks to months,' these authors wrote. 'Disease mitigation measures, however well intentioned, have potential social, economic, and political consequences that need to be fully considered by political leaders as well as health officials. Closing schools is an example.'
The authors went on to warn that closures would force some parents to stay home from work, and they worried about certain segments of society being forced to bear an unfair share of the burden from transmission-control policies. They wrote:
No model, no matter how accurate its epidemiologic assumptions, can illuminate or predict the secondary and tertiary effects of particular disease mitigation measures … If particular measures are applied for many weeks or months, the long-term or cumulative second- and third-order effects could be devastating.
Nearly a decade and a half before the pandemic—in a stark rebuke to the approach championed by the CDC, White House Coronavirus Response Task Force coordinator Deborah Birx, and other powers that be—the paper had called out the major harms that would come to afflict many families in our country as a result of school closures. Yet, from the spring of 2020, health officials who directed our pandemic response ignored many of the consequences they must have known to expect. Or, at the very least, they failed to provide adequate information about them to the public. The officials had opened a bottle of medicine while disregarding the skull and crossbones on the warning label.
And the portents were not just in Henderson's and Nuzzo's paper. A 2011 paper by researchers from Georgetown assessed the decision making behind—and the consequences from—several hundred brief school closures enacted during the 2009 H1N1 pandemic. The authors noted that the child-care costs to families were substantial, and that hardships from closures were inequitable. 'Officials considering closure must weigh not only the total amount of disruption but also the extent to which social costs will be disproportionately borne by certain segments of society,' the authors wrote. Even the CDC playbooks themselves warn of some of these issues. Both the 2007 original and the updated 2017 report cautioned that school closures could lead to the secondary consequence of missed work and loss of income for parents who needed to stay home to take care of their school-age children. This effect, the latter report noted, would be most harmful for lower-income families, who were also hit hardest by COVID in the first place. With prescience, and comic understatement, the authors noted that school closures would be among the 'most controversial' elements of the plan.
Meanwhile, the second of Nuzzo's points—that unwinding interventions is often incredibly difficult, and there must be a plan on how to do so—was also a well-established phenomenon. Just as public-health experts are biased toward intervention, they, along with the public, are also biased toward keeping interventions in place. This is a known phenomenon within the literature of implementation science, a field of study focused on methods to promote the adoption of evidence-based practices in medicine and public health. Westyn Branch-Elliman, an infectious-diseases physician at UCLA School of Medicine with an expertise in implementation science, told me that de-implementation is generally much harder than implementation. 'People tend to err on the side of intervening, and there is often considerable anxiety in removing something you believe has provided safety,' she said.
There also is a sense of inertia and leaving well enough alone. It's not unlike legislation—oftentimes repealing a law, even an unpopular one, poses bigger challenges than whatever barriers existed to getting it passed. Although the initial school closures may have been justifiable (even if off-script in many locations), there was no plan on when and how to reopen. Officials repeated a refrain that schools should open when it was 'safe.' But 'safe' was either pegged to unreachable or arbitrary benchmarks or, more often, not defined. This meant there would be limited recourse against a public that had been led to believe this intervention was a net benefit, even long after evidence showed otherwise. The lack of an exit plan—or an 'off-ramp,' as many health professionals would later term it—would prove disastrous for tens of millions of children in locations where social and political pressures prevented a reversal of the closures.
[Read: The biggest disruption in the history of American education]
Without sufficient acknowledgment of the harms of school closures, or adequate planning for unwinding this intervention, officials showed that their decisions to close were simply reactive rather than carefully considered. The decision makers set a radical project in motion with no plan on how to stop it. In effect, officials steered a car off the road, threw a cinder block on the accelerator, then jumped out of the vehicle with passengers still in the back. No one was in the front or even knew how to unstick the pedal.
This article was adapted from David Zweig's book An Abundance of Caution: American Schools, the Virus, and a Story of Bad Decisions.
Article originally published at The Atlantic
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

See where COVID cases are rising amid summer wave: New CDC data
See where COVID cases are rising amid summer wave: New CDC data

Yahoo

time2 hours ago

  • Yahoo

See where COVID cases are rising amid summer wave: New CDC data

New data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention shows activity of COVID-19 is increasing across a wide swath of the country. As the U.S. approaches the midpoint of summer, the CDC is reporting cases of the virus are growing or likely growing in more than half of all states, including many in the South and Southeast. The center's July 18 report shows at least 26 states plus Washington, D.C., are encountering a summer surge, according to its epidemic trend modeling, using data from emergency department visits. The CDC notes its modeling indicates trends in overall cases, not the actual numbers of current infections. New COVID variant is spreading: What are the symptoms? A familiar summer surge The rate of positive COVID-19 tests is increasing nationally, the CDC said of the last week in data, with emergency department visits for the virus are increasing among children 4 years old and younger. Though there is an uptick in COVID-19 cases in more than two dozen states, the CDC says the overall amount of people seeking care for acute respiratory illnesses is at a very low level. That's accompanied by low levels of seasonal influenza activity and very low levels of RSV activity, the CDC says. Overall, trends in COVID-19 cases continue downward as compared to the last few years, according to long-term data trends in deaths, emergency room visits and positive cases. The U.S. has seen a wave of higher COVID-19 cases every summer since 2020. COVID-19 in 2025: What's the latest vaccine guidance? It's complicated. COVID-19 cases are growing in 10 states: Arkansas Hawaii Illinois Iowa Kentucky North Carolina Ohio Pennsylvania Texas Virginia The CDC's latest report says cases are likely growing in more than a dozen other states, plus Washington, D.C. In one state − Montana − COVID-19 cases are likely declining. COVID-19 cases are likely growing in the following 16 states: Alaska California Delaware Georgia Indiana Maine Maryland Massachusetts Michigan Mississippi New Jersey New York Oklahoma South Carolina Tennessee Wisconsin Kathryn Palmer is a national trending news reporter for USA TODAY. You can reach her at kapalmer@ and on X @KathrynPlmr. This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: COVID-19 cases rising in these states amid summer wave: CDC data Solve the daily Crossword

See where COVID cases are rising amid summer wave: New CDC data
See where COVID cases are rising amid summer wave: New CDC data

USA Today

time2 hours ago

  • USA Today

See where COVID cases are rising amid summer wave: New CDC data

New data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention shows activity of COVID-19 is increasing across a wide swath of the country. As the U.S. approaches the midpoint of summer, the CDC is reporting cases of the virus are growing or likely growing in more than half of all states, including many in the South and Southeast. The center's July 18 report shows at least 26 states plus Washington, D.C., are encountering a summer surge, according to its epidemic trend modeling, using data from emergency department visits. The CDC notes its modeling indicates trends in overall cases, not the actual numbers of current infections. New COVID variant is spreading: What are the symptoms? A familiar summer surge The rate of positive COVID-19 tests is increasing nationally, the CDC said of the last week in data, with emergency department visits for the virus are increasing among children 4 years old and younger. Though there is an uptick in COVID-19 cases in more than two dozen states, the CDC says the overall amount of people seeking care for acute respiratory illnesses is at a very low level. That's accompanied by low levels of seasonal influenza activity and very low levels of RSV activity, the CDC says. Overall, trends in COVID-19 cases continue downward as compared to the last few years, according to long-term data trends in deaths, emergency room visits and positive cases. The U.S. has seen a wave of higher COVID-19 cases every summer since 2020. COVID-19 in 2025: What's the latest vaccine guidance? It's complicated. COVID-19 cases are growing in 10 states: The CDC's latest report says cases are likely growing in more than a dozen other states, plus Washington, D.C. In one state − Montana − COVID-19 cases are likely declining. COVID-19 cases are likely growing in the following 16 states: Kathryn Palmer is a national trending news reporter for USA TODAY. You can reach her at kapalmer@ and on X @KathrynPlmr.

The Pandemic Literally Aged Our Brains
The Pandemic Literally Aged Our Brains

Medscape

time2 hours ago

  • Medscape

The Pandemic Literally Aged Our Brains

This transcript has been edited for clarity. Welcome to Impact Factor , your weekly dose of commentary on a new medical study. I'm Dr F. Perry Wilson from the Yale School of Medicine. Living through the COVID pandemic aged your brain by about five and a half extra months. This, according to new research. It's a pretty scary headline, but what does 'brain age' even mean, how do you measure it, and what risks does a five-and-a-half month older brain have to face? We're going to use what's left of our brains to dig through the data this week. Stay tuned. The study generating those scary headlines is 'Accelerated Brain Ageing During the COVID-19 Pandemic', from Ali-Reza Mohammadi-Nejad and colleagues, appearing in Nature Communications . But before we get into it, a reminder that SARS-CoV-2, the virus that caused the COVID-19 pandemic, is a weird one, especially when it comes to the brain. It was pretty early in the pandemic when we realized that one of the rather unique symptoms that came with COVID infection, differentiating it from the common cold and flu infections and the like, was anosmia — the loss of smell. It turned out this was due to infection of some epithelial cells in the nose, with inflammation impacting the olfactory bulb of the brain. To be clear, evidence of direct brain infection by SARS-CoV-2 is fairly weak. Neurons don't express high levels of the ACE2 receptor — the viruses' point of entry to other cells. And while some autopsy studies have found viral genetic material in the brain, it has been quite difficult to find live virus in brain cells. But secondary effects of the virus — inflammation and microclotting— do affect the brain. And multiplestudies have suggested that infection can worsen certain cognitive outcomes. There was more to the pandemic than just the virus, though. There was social isolation, higher levels of stress, and loss of work and other cognitively stimulating activities. In other words, there were lots of reasons for people's brains to get a little worse during those few years. That's really what the Nature Communications study is looking at. It's an overall sense of how our brains are doing, and 'brain age' is a useful proxy for that concept. So, what is brain age? It's pretty straightforward. Imagine a carnival barker doing the 'guess your age' thing. You come up, they take a look at you, squint, and call out a number, usually with startling accuracy. The carnival barker is using various clues — features on your face, wrinkles, hairstyle, and so on — to make a guess. We can do the same thing with an MRI machine. We just have to teach a computer what the brains of different ages look like. That's what researchers did here. Using the huge UK biobank cohort, they took brain scans of more than 15,000 healthy people of various ages and trained a machine-learning model to predict age based just on the images. It got pretty accurate, as you can see here. Of course, it's not perfect. Nor would we expect it to be. Some people's brains look younger than their stated age. Call it the Paul Rudd effect. And, of course, some brains look older than they should. The distance between your calendar age and your brain age is the 'brain age gap' (BAG), with higher numbers implying that your brain is older than it should be. This gap seems to stay pretty consistent over time. If your BAG is 5 years right now, it tends to stay around 5 years even a few years later, provided nothing intervenes to more rapidly age your brain. If anyone ever accuses you of having an excessive BAG, you can say 'that's not my bag, baby.' (And that ends the '90s references for this week.) It's the repeated brain scans that make this study interesting. The researchers identified about 1000 participants who had multiple brain scans, on average about 2 years apart. For 432 of those folks, the pandemic happened between the two scans. So, we can look at how much their brains aged in that timeframe and compare that aging to a group who was not exposed to the pandemic. This is the meat of the study. Here are the primary results. Remember, BAG is supposed to stay pretty stable if nothing else has changed. And that's what we see in the control group. Between the two scans, there was, on average, no change in BAG — though the distribution here encompasses changes in both directions. Now we add the pandemic group. What you see is that the distribution has shifted, on average by 5.5 months. That's where we get that headline that started this whole thing. But of course, 5.5 is just the average change in BAG. Different people's brains aged at different speeds. Still, overall, this is a statistically significant difference. You're probably wondering why some brains aged more than others. The 5.5 month result is the effect of the pandemic – not necessarily infection. Out of the 432 individuals with a postpandemic scan, 134 actually had documented COVID-19 before that second scan. Interestingly, the increase in brain age was similar among those infected and those not infected. To be fair, only five of those infected were sick enough to be hospitalized, but it still seems that the bulk of the aging effect of the pandemic may have been due to factors independent of the virus itself; factors that made the pandemic effect worse. The brains of older people and men seemed to age more during the pandemic than those of younger people and women. Poor socioeconomic status and lower education also led to more pandemic brain aging. Still, it's not how you look; it's how you feel. Do older-looking brains on brain scans function worse? The study doesn't offer much support for this. Cognitive testing found no compelling relationship between changes in brain age and changes in various tests of cognitive ability across the entire cohort. There did seem to be some relationship among those infected with COVID-19: They did worse on cognitive tests if their brains had aged more than expected. But I'm often wary of signals like this that appear in a very particular subgroup. Leaving the realm of data and stepping squarely into the land of speculation, I think what we are likely seeing here is that the pandemic was a population-wide neurologic stressor. The isolation, the anxiety, and the lack of cognitive stimulation led our brains to atrophy a bit. It does not seem that this is a direct result of viral infection, though again, we don't have data on people with more severe COVID-19. The big question is, what happens next? Now that we are reintegrated with society, back at work, and using our brains a bit more, will they grow younger again? It remains to be seen. But if the pandemic-induced gray in my hair is any indicator, there may be no going back.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store