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A couple of days ago we were all prepared for our children to go back to school, despite the teaching unions advising against it. Now it’s all change again, with our children are staying home for at least another few weeks. It makes sense since Public Health England says 26% of Covid infection clusters, 2,722 out of 10,000, happened thanks to schools being open, with just 8% - 816 cases - traced back to hospitals.
In the meantime schools will have to provide remote learning until at least mid-February, with GCSE and A-level exams potentially cancelled for the second year running. Anne Longfield, the Children’s Commissioner for England, has demanded all teachers are vaccinated “as a priority”.
In the meantime, you need to plan what happens when the children finally return.
Obviously we need to get kids back to school, for all sorts of educational, social and emotional reasons. But how can we do that when the virus keeps coming back for another swipe? If you run a school how can you disinfect your classrooms and common areas against Covid safely and quickly without too much down-time, without teams of cleaners, without expensive chemicals? How can you keep your staff safe and minimise the spread of the virus, which looks like it isn’t going to go away any time soon?
The problem is that schools act as vectors for transmission, causing the virus to spread between households. What if you could minimise the risks of that happening? In fact, you can. Here’s how.
What the government says about school hygiene and school Covid disinfection
Once our kids go back to school, the government’s guidance requires “robust hand and respiratory hygiene”. Children will be encouraged to sanitise their hands when they arrive at school, when they come in from breaks, when they use the loo, change classrooms, and before they eat. Hand sanitiser stations should be provided in as many places as possible, with supervision a possibility “given risks around ingestion”.
School staff will be expected to ‘supply and promote the use of tissues as part of the catch it, bin it, kill it technique’. And so-called “enhanced cleaning” will be introduced, where the surfaces touched regularly by pupils – things like desks, door handles, books, and play equipment - are cleaned with bleach and detergents.
Toilets must be frequently cleaned, and pupils will face restrictions around what they can bring into school from home, with an ‘essentials only’ policy to include lunch boxes, hats, coats, books, stationery, and mobile phones.
All this can easily end up costly as well as time-consuming to apply, at a time when our children need to get back to normal as fast as possible. Schools face constant ongoing expense around hiring teams of human cleaning staff and keeping them safe, supplying them with cleaning materials and chemicals, buying masks and hand sanitiser, the list goes on. With education budgets as they are, it’s a big ask for most schools.
Luckily, there is a better way.
School disinfection? Use UVC LED technology
UV light has been used to disinfect healthcare settings for decades, killing off coronaviruses and Hospital Acquired Infections quickly and effectively with minimal down-time.
UVC light is the best of all at killing viruses and other pathogens., and the best way to generate the right type of light easily, cleanly and cheaply is by using LED technology. That’s what our Covid disinfection machinery does for schools, hospitals, care homes, restaurants, dental surgeries, theatres and much more.
Our UVC LED Covid disinfection machines disinfect every surface the light touches in record time. An average classroom might take something like 4 minutes to disinfect, meaning you lose very little teaching time. It’s a whole lot less costly than employing teams of cleaners to be on site through the school day, every day, plus all the equipment they need. It doesn’t use nasty chemicals, either.
If you want to prepare for the return of your pupils, give us a call to talk through the possibilities plus
we can put you in touch with those
schools who have done just that.
Invest in effective infection control and provide the very best front-line protection for your staff and pupils.