NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!
Cases of COVID-19 have risen throughout the country amid the spread of the omicron variant, but Brown University School of Public Health Dean Dr. Ashish Jha told “Fox News Sunday” this is no excuse for closing down schools and making children go through remote learning again.
Host Mike Emanuel noted that, according to the Burbio school tracker, more than 800 U.S. schools are now planning on shutting down in January instead of bringing students back in person after winter break. Jha said this is a mistake.
ANTIVIRAL PILLS TO FIGHT COVID ARE ‘GAME CHANGERS’ FOR THE HIGH RISK: ADM. GIROIR
“This really shouldn’t even be on the table, and I’m disappointed to see this is happening,” Jha said, noting that schools now have the tools to remain open. President Biden said Tuesday that children are “as safe in schools as they are any place” if precautions are taken.
“Schools should be absolutely the last place to close and the first place to open,” he stressed, referring to the educational, emotional, social and mental health benefits of in-person learning.
BIRTHPLACE OF JESUS SHUT TO FOREIGN CHRISTIAN PILGRIMS ON CHRISTMAS BECAUSE OF OMICRON
Jha did acknowledge that if the pandemic causes staff shortages that make in-person learning a problem, that would be different, but that “really should be the only context” in which schools close.
While the omicron variant has put the country into a frenzy due to its rapid spread, Jha said that he hopes and expects that, like in South Africa, omicron in the U.S. will “peak quickly and start coming down quickly as well.”
CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP
Still, Jha said he does expect the CDC to change the definition of what it means to be fully vaccinated, and that a third shot will likely be needed to have that status.
“That is where the science is leaning,” he said.