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  • Sickness Guidance

    Sickness and Diarrhoea

    Following a case of sickness and/or diarrhoea, a student is able to return to school as long as they feel well enough to do so.

    Meningitis

    Meningococcal (bacterial) infection is rare and does NOT spread easily from person to person. The germ that causes meningococcal disease is passed from person to person in droplets from the mouth and nose. However, the germ is very fragile, and dies rapidly outside the body. This means that very close contact is necessary before there is a risk of becoming infected.

    As always, it’s crucial that we all stay alert to signs and symptoms of meningitis and septicaemia, and seek urgent medical help if concerned.

    Symptoms can include:

    • a high temperature
    • vomiting
    • severe headache
    • a stiff neck,
    • aching limbs and joints
    • a dislike of bright lights
    • drowsiness a purple rash which does not fade when pressed in small babies,
    • a refusal to feed and a high pitched cry.

    More information can be found here.

    Covid-19

    If your child has symptoms of a respiratory infection and they have a high temperature or do not feel well enough to come to school or carry out normal activities, they should stay at home and avoid contact with other people until they no longer have a high temperature or until they no longer feel unwell.

    If they have taken a Covid-19 test that returned a positive result, they should please stay at home and avoid contact with other people for 3 days after the day they took the test. The suggestion is that most young people with Covid-19 will no longer be infectious to others after 3 days. However, everyone is different and you should continue to follow this advice until your child feels well enough to return to school again and no longer has a high temperature.

    Adults and young people over the age of 18 should also follow this advice, although the number of days for isolation is 5 rather than 3.

    More information and guidance can be found here.