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It Started with One Kid.

Informational, Safety Tips

CATEGORY

1/20/2026

POSTED

It Started with One Kid.

Now Half the School Has Pink Eye.

Monday morning. One kid shows up to school with goopy, red eyes.

By Wednesday? Five more cases.

By Friday? The classroom looks like a zombie movie.

Welcome to pink eye season.

๐Ÿฆ  Why Pink Eye Spreads Like Wildfire

Pink eye (conjunctivitis) is insanely contagious. Here’s why:

  • Kids touch everything – desks, toys, doorknobs, each other
  • They rub their eyes constantly – spreading infected discharge on their hands
  • They share stuff – pencils, water bottles, tablets, face paint
  • Viral pink eye can live on surfaces for hours to days
  • Symptoms can take 1-3 days to appear – they’re contagious before they look sick

One infected kid touches a keyboard. Another kid touches the same keyboard. Rubs their eye. Boom. Pink eye.

๐Ÿ‘€ What Pink Eye Actually Looks Like

Classic symptoms:

  • ๐Ÿ‘๏ธ Red or pink appearance in the white of the eye
  • ๐Ÿ’ง Watery discharge (viral) or thick, goopy discharge (bacterial)
  • ๐Ÿ˜ซ Eyes crusted shut in the morning
  • ๐Ÿ˜– Itchy, gritty feeling
  • ๐Ÿ’ฆ Excessive tearing
  • โ˜€๏ธ Sensitivity to light

The Three Types of Pink Eye

1. Viral Pink Eye

Caused by:

Same viruses that cause colds. Often accompanies upper respiratory infections.

How to spot it:

  • Watery, clear discharge
  • Extremely itchy
  • Usually starts in one eye, spreads to the other
  • May have cold symptoms too

Treatment:

No antibiotics needed (it’s a virus). Runs its course in 7-14 days. We provide supportive care and rule out bacterial infection.

2. Bacterial Pink Eye

How to spot it:

  • Thick, yellow or green discharge
  • Eyes glued shut with crusty goop
  • More pain than viral
  • Can affect one or both eyes

Treatment:

Antibiotic eye drops. Usually clears up in 3-5 days with treatment.

3. Allergic Pink Eye

How to spot it:

  • Both eyes affected at the same time
  • Very itchy
  • Watery discharge
  • Other allergy symptoms (sneezing, runny nose)

Treatment:

Antihistamine eye drops, avoid allergens. Not contagious.

When to Come to Night Watch

Come in if:

  • Eyes are red and goopy
  • You need a school/work note (most require medical clearance)
  • Thick, colored discharge (likely bacterial = needs antibiotics)
  • Pain or vision changes
  • Symptoms not improving after 3-4 days
  • Child under 1 year old with pink eye

๐Ÿงผ Stop the Spread

Pink eye is preventable. Here’s how to protect your family:

  • Wash hands constantly – especially after touching eyes
  • Don’t touch or rub eyes
  • Don’t share towels, pillows, or makeup
  • Change pillowcases daily during infection
  • Disinfect surfaces – doorknobs, tablets, keyboards, phones
  • Keep infected kids home until cleared by doctor
  • Throw out old eye makeup after pink eye

What We Do at Night Watch

  • Examine eyes to determine type of pink eye
  • Prescribe antibiotic drops if bacterial
  • Provide symptom relief recommendations
  • Write school/work clearance notes
  • Educate on preventing spread to family members

โฐ When Can They Go Back?

Bacterial pink eye: 24 hours after starting antibiotic drops

Viral pink eye: When discharge is gone and eyes are no longer red

Allergic pink eye: Can return immediately (not contagious)

๐Ÿ‘๏ธ Pink eye spreads fast. Treatment is easy. Get it diagnosed. Get it treated. Get back to life.