Children with mild anxiety better off in school, Whitty suggests to parents
The Guardian|September 06, 2023
Children with mild and moderate anxiety are likely to be better off attending school because long periods of absence can make symptoms worse, the chief medical officer for England has said.
Sally Weale
Children with mild anxiety better off in school, Whitty suggests to parents

Amid mounting concern in government about the crisis in pupil attendance since Covid, Prof Chris Whitty has written to schools to reassure parents that anxiety can be a normal part of growing up and that being in lessons can help.

As the new school term got under way across England, Whitty said it was also appropriate for parents to send children to school with mild respiratory illnesses, including cold symptoms such as a minor cough, runny nose or sore throat. He said they should not be sent to school if they had a temperature of 38C (100F) or above.

Details of the letter emerged as the government's preferred candidate to take over as Ofsted's chief inspector of schools and children's services in England called for an urgent review of increased absence in schools since Covid.

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