When Should I Keep My Child Home?
Guidelines for Deciding When Your Child Needs to Stay Home From School
It can be hard to know when to send children to school if they tell you that they do not feel well. In general, the best place for them is in school, but there are some times when keeping them home to rest or calling your health care provider is recommended.
Specifically, please keep your child home if they have these symptoms:
Fever (100°F / 37.8°C)
Diarrhea or vomiting in the last 24 hours
Symptoms that prevent them from participating in school, such as-
Excessive tiredness or lack of appetite
Productive coughing, sneezing
Headache, body aches, earache
Severe sore throat
In cases where medication has been prescribed, the first dose should always be given at home, and your child needs to stay home until they have completed 24 hours of the prescribed medication.
Returning to Normal Activities
Students can return to school when they:
are fever free (without fever-reducing medicine) for at least 24 hours;
have gone without vomiting or diarrhea for at least 24 hours; and
can participate in regular school activities.
Please contact your child’s primary care provider or the school nurse with any questions.
Symptom Checker: Respiratory Illnesses
The common cold, RSV, the flu, and COVID-19 all have similar symptoms. Knowing the signs of these respiratory illnesses can help keep you and your loved ones safe.
The district reserves the right to send your child home following evaluation by a school nurse based on these symptoms or others.
*If you feel that your child has symptoms related to COVID-19, we encourage you to conduct an antigen test before sending them to school. Those who test positive for COVID-19 are also encouraged to wear a well-fitting mask for five days after returning to normal activities and/or until they test negative. See below for more information on COVID-19 symptom screening and testing.
When going back to normal activities following a respiratory illness, students should take added precautions over the next five days, especially when they will be around older adults, young children, and those with weakened immune systems. Such precautions include:
Practicing enhanced hygiene (e.g., covering coughs and sneezes, washing or sanitizing hands often, cleaning frequently touched surfaces)
Taking steps for cleaner air (e.g., bringing in more fresh outside air, purifying indoor air, gathering outdoors)
COVID-19 Symptom Screening and Testing
Symptom Screenings
Families and staff should regularly check for symptoms before reporting to school or work each day. Students and staff experiencing any of the following symptoms should undergo testing for COVID-19:
Fever or chills
Cough
Shortness of breath or difficulty breathing
Fatigue
Muscle or body aches
Headache
New loss of taste or smell
Sore throat
Congestion or runny nose
Nausea or vomiting
Diarrhea
For more information, please see the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's Symptoms of COVID-19 webpage.
Antigen Test Kits
New York State has ended the distribution of COVID-19 antigen test kits. Test kits are no longer available through school health offices.
Keeping Kids Healthy
To keep your child, your family, and all members of the ICSD community healthy, please discuss flu and COVID-19 vaccinations with your child’s healthcare provider, regularly check your child for symptoms, and encourage good hygiene habits:
Washing hands for 20 seconds or using hand sanitizer before eating, after using the bathroom, after sneezing or coughing if covering your mouth, and anytime hands are visibly dirty
Practicing good respiratory etiquette by coughing or sneezing into your sleeve, elbow, or tissue
Wearing a well-fitting mask around others while symptomatic