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Childcare Policymakers Advised To Take Extra Precautions Against COVID-19

Rutgers researchers are advising childcare policymakers and administrators to enact systemwide changes to prevent the spread of the coronavirus. The Rutgers Pediatric Early Education Working Group’s new recommendations outline specific measures for safer emergency childcare during the COVID-19 pandemic for parents with essential jobs.

While adding specific guidance, the recommendations reflect consensus based on public health principles and guidelines from the federal government, states, and the American Academy of Pediatrics.

The Rutgers group advises childcare policymakers and administrators to:

Guidance for child care providers will only be feasible if policy is aligned and adequate funding is forthcoming.

“These precautions are necessary because COVID-19 is easily spread,” said Lawrence Kleinman, professor and vice chair for academic development, and director of the Division of Population Health, Quality, and Implementation Sciences (PopQuIS in Pediatrics) in the Department of Pediatrics at Rutgers Robert Wood Johnson Medical School. “But they’re also necessary to prioritize the safety of these children and families, along with their caregivers and teachers when there is so much we don’t know about the virus.”

“A systemic approach with child care, Head Start and public schools cooperating is needed,” according to Steven Barnett, board of governors professor of education and senior co-director and founder of the National Institute for Early Education Research (NIEER). “For example, public schools can open their closed buildings for emergency childcare. They have large and open indoor and outdoor spaces, which gives children room to play and helps teachers manage social distancing.”

Recommended childcare center protocols include:

The Rutgers group urges policymakers and providers to collect and use data, which is critical to further learning how to prevent infection in childcare settings and improve these guidelines.

“Data enables us to continuously learn what works and what doesn’t,” said Manuel Jimenez, assistant professor of pediatrics in PopQuIS and director of developmental behavioral pediatrics at the Boggs Center on Developmental Disabilities at Rutgers Robert Wood Johnson Medical School and developmental behavioral pediatrician at PSE&G Children’s Specialized Hospital. “We can then share this new knowledge with childcare providers, who can then put it to use in their day-to-day operations.”

The group’s guidance is available online at http://nieer.org/childcare-recommendations. Along with Drs. Kleinman, Barnett, and Jimenez, the report was authored by Drs. Patricia Whitley Williams and Alan Weller of the Department of Pediatrics.

Rutgers Pediatrics Early Education Working Group is a collaboration between the Rutgers Robert Wood Johnson Medical School Department of Pediatrics (Divisions of Population Health, Quality, and Implementation Sciences (PopQuIS) and Allergy, Immunology, and Infectious Diseases) and National Institute for Early Education Research at the Rutgers Graduate School of Education.

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