It's 6:30 AM. Your child has a slight cough. They seem okay. You have a meeting at 9:00 that cannot move. You weigh the morning ahead and ask yourself the question every working parent has asked: Are they really sick, or are they just… a little under the weather?

This decision shouldn't be agonizing, and it shouldn't be guilt-ridden either way. Here's a clear, no-judgment guide to when a child needs to stay home — and when a small symptom is fine to send. Print this, stick it on the fridge, refer to it on the foggy mornings.

Always keep them home

If your child has any of these symptoms, they belong at home — full stop:

The 24-hour rule

For fever, vomiting, and diarrhea, the rule is the same across nearly all licensed and unlicensed Ontario child care: a child must be symptom-free for a full 24 hours without the help of fever-reducing medication before returning. If your child's fever broke at 6:00 PM yesterday with the help of Tylenol, that doesn't count as the start of the 24-hour window — the window begins after the medication wears off and the fever stays gone on its own.

The 24-hour rule isn't about your child's recovery — it's about everyone else's family.

It's probably fine to send them

These small symptoms, on their own and without other red flags, are usually fine:

The hard middle

Then there are the 50/50 mornings. These are the genuinely tricky ones, and the right answer depends on the specifics:

What we promise on our end

If your child becomes ill at Harmony Kids, we will call you immediately and ask that they be picked up within the hour. We never guilt-trip a sick-day pickup — we are deeply grateful when families send healthy children, because it protects every other child in our care, and it protects me.

If you are unsure, please call or text. I am happy to look at a photo of a rash, listen to a description of last night's symptoms, and help you decide. The goal is not perfect attendance — the goal is a healthy group, every day.

One last thing

Please don't dose your child with Tylenol to "get them through the morning." It happens, and it's understandable, and I know the pressures are real. But a medicated child arrives healthier than they are — and the moment that medication wears off, we have a sick child on our hands, away from their parent, and the full group is at risk. If your child needs medication to attend, they need to be home.

I say this not to add guilt, but to remove it. You're allowed to keep your child home. Your boss, your colleagues, your future self — all of them will survive a missed day. The flu that races through a daycare in February is much harder to recover from than one rescheduled meeting.