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a higher degree of physical shock, akin to toxic shock syndrome. While the COVID‐19 virus was primarily a respiratory disease in adults, PMIS was known to affect the organs and blood vessels in children and youth.

      Medical experts were not sure that PMIS was caused by the virus, but they were sure that there was a relationship between the two. Many of the children and youth who were diagnosed with PMIS were found to also carry the COVID‐19 virus, and a significant number of these children and youth had been exposed to a person infected by COVID‐19. The first U.S. cases of PMIS emerged in New York, about a month after a surge of COVID‐19 infections were reported in that region, but cases were also reported in England, one of which resulted in death (MacMillan, 2020).

      Of the total number of COVID‐19 cases reported in the United States, only 2 percent of those cases were reported in children and youth, and they ranged in age from infants to teenagers (Melillo, 2020). Thus, as more cases of PMIS began to emerge, concerns for children’s and youth’s physical health increased among parents and healthcare providers and added to the challenges of returning children to school and childcare facilities.

      As the disastrous effects of the pandemic grew clearer, so did the long‐term implications. One of the most significant concerns, as noted, was the lasting impact it might have on children and youth in relation to their social, emotional, and mental well‐being. Parents and children alike struggled to cope with the pandemic’s upheaval on their lives, but for many, the effects of sheltering in place and social isolation left them with feelings of emotional despair. Parents and educators grappled with distance learning, and for some students, educational experiences were grossly inequitable. For many families, the economic devastation caused by the pandemic meant the loss of jobs and an accompanying loss of income, which worsened the distress caused by the situation. For those who were already without jobs and a source of income, or living at a poverty level, the impact was completely devastating.

      Though the COVID‐19 pandemic was felt by generations of people, history has shown that disasters typically have a greater psychological impact on children than they do on adults. However, the impact can vary by age, environmental conditions, exposure to the disaster, and levels of support from parents and other adults. If parents or adult caretakers of children also suffer from distress or a mental illness, the psychological impact is greater for these children (Fothergill, 2017). Indeed, studies have shown that parental distress is sometimes the strongest predictor of their children’s distress (Norris, Friedman, & Watson, 2002, p. 237). So, while there is a widespread assumption that children have great resiliency and will simply bounce back from a disaster, this is true only if they receive proper care and supports.

      After several months of quarantine and in the weeks leading up to a lifting of the quarantine, communities began examining the re‐opening of schools. This became an enormous undertaking because there was still so much that was unknown about the virus (primarily because of a limited amount of scientific data). Consequently, plans had to include multiple options and various requirements, such as allowing physical distance among and between staff and students, equipping schools to maintain safe and sanitized environments, and equipping school health staff with appropriate healthcare supplies and personal protective equipment. As schools began exploring these options, they also recognized that there might be accompanying ripple effects. For example, the limitations of the physical‐distancing requirement might mean that not all students could return to a full school schedule, which might subsequently mean inequitable opportunities for some students. There were various consequences for each potential scenario, and each was of concern.

      Influence of Exclusionary Discipline Practices on School Safety

      The following blog was posted on May 7, 2020, as pandemic recovery efforts were just beginning. The blog provides an example of how fears for students’ academic regression might take precedence over their need for SEL supports when addressing policy and funding for schools. The fear that SEL might become the sacrificial lamb to the budget was a very real and pervasive concern.

      Social and Emotional Learning—Why We Must Act Now

      Since the beginning of the COVID‐19 pandemic, experts have predicted that the impact of the virus on human heath will reach far beyond that of physical safety. In the wake of social distancing and sheltering in place, the need for mental health services will rise sharply and swiftly, according to the experts. The healthcare landscape that has been embattled by efforts to keep infected people alive while keeping healthcare workers safe will quickly transform into a different type of battlefield—one beleaguered by the effects of mental illness.

      Unfortunately, if history has taught us anything, it has taught us that economic recovery efforts have always sacrificed mental health and social services first, accompanied by decreased funding to departments of education. If this historical trend continues, and there’s no reason to suspect it will not, the services that will be needed the most will once again become the sacrificial lambs of the economy.

      The impact of economic recovery efforts on mental health services no doubt will be distressing, but the impact it will have on education

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