3 teachers in shuttered Jerusalem school have virus; pupils, staff to be tested
As downward trend in nationwide infections continues, cases mount in reopened education system; Bat Yam sisters’ diagnosis also sends dozens into quarantine
Three teachers in a Jerusalem high school have been diagnosed with the coronavirus, a day after it was shut down for a week when three students were found to be infected, the municipality said Thursday, as cases rose in the reopened education system.
A ninth-grade student at the Hebrew Gymnasium in the Rehavia neighborhood was diagnosed with COVID-19 on Tuesday, upon which 210 fellow pupils and teachers were sent to quarantine for 14 days. Subsequently, two seventh-grade students and then three teachers were also diagnosed, and the school, which has 1,200 students, will remain closed for at least a week and go back to online studies.
The Thursday statement by the Jerusalem Municipality said students at the school who receive health services from the Clalit or Meuhedet HMOs were requested to come to a drive-through coronavirus test facility at the city’s Teddy Stadium by 2 p.m. to get tested. The remaining students were asked to contact health clinics to arrange a test.
Jerusalem Mayor Moshe Lion arranged with the management of Hadassah Ein Kerem hospital that all 180 staff members at the school will be tested for COVID-19 at the medical center’s drive-through facility on Sunday, the statement said.

Meanwhile, all students and staff at home but not in quarantine were told to stick to strict social distancing guidelines.
Also Thursday, two sisters from the central Israel city of Bat Yam were diagnosed with coronavirus, having contracted it from their mother, Channel 12 reported.
One of them is a tenth-grade student at the city’s Shazar high school, with 28 of her classmates and ten staff members now entering isolation. The other attends a kindergarten, whose 35 kids and four staff members have all been quarantined.
On Wednesday, two students at Tzafit high school in Beit Berl caught the virus. The school remained open, but 62 students and staff members were sent to isolation.
According to the latest update by the Health Ministry on Wednesday night, there were 1,942 active cases of coronavirus in the country, continuing a downward trend now threatened by the renewed outbreaks in schools.

The figures showed 36 new cases in the previous 24 hours. The total cumulative number of cases was 16,793.
Forty-one patients were in serious condition, 38 of whom were on ventilators. Another 34 carriers were in moderate condition and the rest were displaying mild symptoms, the Health Ministry said.
No additional deaths were reported, with the death count holding at 281 since Monday.
The newly instituted coronavirus cabinet tasked with facilitating the government’s response to the virus is concerned that while the number of active cases continues to drop, fewer people are coming in to be tested, according to Channel 13, which also said the ministers had expressed concern that even fewer Israelis will seek to get tested during the Shavuot holiday on Friday.
Recent weeks have seen a sharp drop-off in the number of new virus cases, with the country lifting restrictions on movement, businesses and educational institutions. Restaurants, pubs, hotels, pools and other establishments began opening up and hosting patrons Wednesday, hours after authorities gave the go-ahead to ease pandemic restrictions and allow some of the last businesses remaining shut to reopen.