Just 13 city children have been hospitalized because of the coronavirus since the pandemic started in early 2020 and none currently, officials said. No San Francisco children have died from the virus.
The numbers defy national trends that have shown large upticks in cases and hospitalizations among school-aged children overall during the delta surge.
Since the city’s public school classrooms reopened in mid-August,
there have been no coronavirus outbreaks among the district’s more than 50,000 students — meaning three linked school cases in two weeks — and fewer than five cases of in-school transmission, health officials announced Thursday.
The data offers the first comprehensive look at what the full reopening of in-person instruction has meant in terms of COVID-19 cases across the city, even amid the delta variant surge.
The vast majority of the 227 district cases reported so far among the 62,000 students and staff were acquired at home or in the community and not spread at schools, according to Department of Public Health officials who are tracking every case.
Fears that the surging delta variant and the simultaneous reopening of schools could send cases spiking among in-person students and staff have not been realized, officials said.
“To date, our data demonstrate that cases among San Francisco residents under age 18 have remained low and stable throughout the pandemic and that schools are low-risk settings when the proper safety protocols are followed,” according to health officials.
The data comes out in the wake of recent teacher union rallies and a school board resolution calling for increases in COVID-19 testing, remote learning, social distancing and air filtration, among other demands, all of which exceed state and local health and safety guidelines.