When to Keep Your Child Home From School
Guidance for Common Signs and Symptoms of Illness
Children should attend school every day and may attend school with mild or improving symptoms. This guidance, based on CDPH recommendations, will help you decide whether your child is too sick to attend school.
If your child has symptoms that prevent them from participating meaningfully in school please keep your child at home. Otherwise follow the symptom guidance below to decide whether they can attend school. A doctor’s note is generally not required to return to school.
- Masking is recommended for cold and cough symptoms
- Encourage frequent hand washing.
If your child has been diagnosed by a doctor with a specific illness, or develops similar symptoms after an exposure to a communicable disease, follow instructions from your doctor or the health department for when your child may return to school (for example, Strep Throat or Norovirus.) Please report diagnosed illnesses to your school office.
- Overall, not feeling well
- Abdominal pain/ stomach ache
- Cough and cold symptoms
- Diarrhea
- Difficult or noisy breathing
- Earache
- Eye irritation, pink eye, or drainage
- Fever
- Headache, stiff or painful neck
- Rash or itching
- Sore throat (pharyngitis) and/or mouth sores
- Vomiting
Overall, not feeling well
Abdominal pain/ stomach ache
Cough and cold symptoms
Diarrhea
Difficult or noisy breathing
Earache
Eye irritation, pink eye, or drainage
Fever
Headache, stiff or painful neck
Rash or itching
Sore throat (pharyngitis) and/or mouth sores
Vomiting
This guidance does NOT:
Does NOT eliminate the possibility of spreading disease in child care or school settings. This guidance is part of a broader strategy to limit the spread of disease. Other preventive measures include, but are not limited to, optimizing indoor air quality, cleaning surfaces, and promoting individual actions that help protect children and staff (e.g., staying up to date on vaccines, washing hands, wearing facemasks) as appropriate.
Does NOT replace the advice of licensed healthcare professionals (such as school nurses) performing individualized assessments.
Does NOT replace or revise guidance provided in an individual child’s care plan for known conditions, as provided to the child care or school by the child’s healthcare provider.
Does NOT replace or revise guidance specified in a child’s individualized education program (IEP), Section 504 plan, or individualized family service plan (IFSP).
Does NOT provide recommendations on how to manage specific diagnoses (e.g., pertussis, hepatitis A). To manage specific diagnoses, follow guidance provided by a child’s healthcare provider, local health department, the California Department of Public Health (CDPH), and/or the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).
This guidance is limited to the evaluation of symptoms suspected to be from infection (e.g., caused by a virus or bacteria). Please remember to consider non-infectious causes for symptoms in any individual child, such as allergies or other chronic conditions.
Download California Department of Public Health Guidance Summaries
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For questions or concerns about this guidance for your student please contact your school office, your School Nurse or call Health Services at 916-643-9412.