Mrs. Smith cannot wrap Billy up in bubble wrap his whole life. Will the Wal*Mart call her and tell her that the cashier that handled his toy last week had the flu? What about the bank teller who counted out the money? Or the greeter who handed out the cart? Mrs. Smith may pay taxes but she has no right to know the medical status of the other children in Billy's school.
AAhh but thats where you are wrong, Mrs. Smith can choose to keep her child in a bubble and while you may not feel you would do that to your own child, it is not for you, or the school to decide that MRs. Smith can't to it to hers, its her choice.
FWIW, I don't believe anyone is asking for the children with confirmed cases be named, only which schools they are in. I didn't read the whole thead, so forgive me if I have missed that. I am speaking about what is going on in my area, where the school district refuses to name the schools in which there are confirmed swine flu cases. I have gotten them for chicken pox, lice, whooping cough, and maybe some others that I may have forgotten. Personally I could care less if Sue was out with the swine flu, I'm not going to knock down her door and demand to see her tests, I would just want to know if ANY student in my children's school had it. Now while this may not be the plague it can be just as deadly to some, and as a parent I should be the one to decide whether or not my child should be KNOWINGLY exposed to this virus. I can understand not wanting to cause paranoia with the masses, but I also understand the need for some to be a little more cautious about their child's exposure. Yes, you shouldn't keep them in a bubble, but its up to you as a parent whether or not you want to in some situations.
http://www.otsegocounty.com/depts/doh/CommunicableDiseases.htm
The investigation of reported communicable diseases and prevention of outbreaks are among the highest priorities of the Health Department.
Staff works closely with New York State Department of Health to investigate, treat and educate the public and inform local providers. Our goal is to prevent and reduce transmission of all communicable disease through this system of surveillance, control and education.
Certain diseases, called reportable communicable diseases, are required by law to be reported to the local health department. In most cases, a public health nurse contacts the healthcare provider, patient, and/or family in attempt to determine how the disease was contracted and to teach how to prevent further spread of the disease.
Now, some are required by law, including lab confirmed influenza to be reported to teh state health department in order to do what they state in the first paragraph. It would seem that not disclosing the information about which schools have confirmed cases would directly go against that goal.