Millennium Post

‘Children face greater risk from virus than previously thought’

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NEW YORK: Children, teens, and young adults are at greater risk for severe complicati­ons from COVID-19 than previously thought, according to a study which says those with underlying health conditions are at even greater risk.

"The idea that COVID-19 is sparing of young people is just false," said study coauthor Lawrence Kleinman from Rutgers University in the US.

According to the study, published in JAMA Pediatrics, children are more likely to get very sick if they have other chronic conditions like obesity.

"It is also important to note that children without chronic illness are also at risk. Parents need to continue to take the virus seriously," Kleinman cautioned. The study, published in JAMA Pediatrics, is the first to describe the characteri­stics of seriously ill pediatric COVID19 patients in North America.

In the research, the scientists assessed 48 children and young adults -- from newborns to 21 years old -- who were admitted to pediatric intensive care units (PICUS) in the US and Canada for COVID-19 in March and April.

The study noted that more than 80 per cent of the children had chronic underlying conditions, such as immune suppressio­n, obesity, diabetes, seizures, or chronic lung disease.

Of these children, 40 per cent depended on technologi­cal support due to developmen­tal delays or genetic anomalies, the researcher­s said.

More than 20 per cent experience­d failure of two or more organ systems due to COVID19, they said, adding that nearly 40 per cent required a breathing tube and ventilator.

At the end of the follow-up period, about 33 percent of the children were still hospitalis­ed due to COVID-19, the scientists reported in the study.

Three of the children still required ventilator support and one of them was still on life support.

The study also noted that two of the children admitted during the three-week study period died.

"This study provides a baseline understand­ing of the early disease burden of COVID-19 in pediatric patients," said Hariprem Rajasekhar, a pediatric intensivis­t involved in conducting the study at Robert Wood Johnson Medical School's Department of Pediatrics.

Compared with mortality rates of up to 62 per cent among adults admitted to ICUS for COVID-19, the study noted that the mortality rate for PICU patients is 4.2 per cent.

"This early study shows that COVID-19 can result in a significan­t disease burden in children but confirms that severe illness is less frequent, and early hospital outcomes in children are better than in adults," the scientists wrote in the study.

According to Kleinman, doctors are also seeing a new Covid-related syndrome in children.

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