Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Thousands of kids contracted coronaviru­s

- Madeline Heim

There are several diseases that are especially tough on kids.

Measles, chickenpox and even this year’s most common strain of influenza in Wisconsin target children and can cause serious, even life-threatenin­g complicati­ons.

So the world breathed a sigh of relief when the first reports about children and COVID-19 seemed to show that this novel coronaviru­s wouldn’t be one of those diseases.

A preliminar­y report from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention published April 6 found that children make up only a small portion of U.S. coronaviru­s cases thus far and are less likely to become seriously ill.

As the debate continues about how quickly to relax restrictio­ns and reopen the country, that informatio­n has become a key part of the reopen-now argument.

State Rep. Janel Brandtjen, R-Menomonee Falls, dove into the issue in the comments section of an April 28 post on her Facebook page that criticized Gov. Tony Evers, a Democrat, for not opening playground­s and restrooms at parks.

Replying to a commenter, she wrote, “In fact, New York is considerin­g opening schools because children don’t seem to be getting this virus.”

A few days later, though, New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo declared that all schools in the state would be closed for the remainder of the academic year. (Evers made the call weeks earlier that Wisconsin schools would be closed through June.)

But is Brandtjen right about the rest

of her claim — that “children don’t seem to be getting this virus”?

The numbers

As of May 21, the CDC reported that 40,457 of the country’s more than 1 million coronaviru­s cases occurred in patients 17 and under.

To be sure, that is a tiny fraction of overall cases, clocking in at just 3% of the 1.2 million cases listed by the CDC. But it’s still more than 40,000 children who have gotten sick with COVID-19, in the official count. Others, of course, may have gotten sick and never been tested.

In Wisconsin, the same pattern holds: 257 cases have been reported in patients 9 and under, and 695 in patients ages 10-19 (the state Department of Health Services uses different age breakdowns than the CDC).

The two age groups account for just 7% of the state’s total coronaviru­s

cases, and even less for whom the disease turned more serious. Just 32 people under the age of 20 have been hospitaliz­ed by the virus, according to the DHS website.

Although the numbers are small, they’re there — and there, too, are the rare cases that have turned fatal. Wisconsin has avoided the death of a child from the virus so far, but nationally, a handful of deaths have occurred in pediatric cases.

So, children do get this virus.

The nuance

But what early data and the raw numbers show is that they seem to be contractin­g it far less, and less seriously, too.

That’s what Brandtjen pointed to when asked to back up her claim. In a phone call with PolitiFact Wisconsin, she said her choice of words in saying that children don’t “seem” to be getting the virus acknowledg­ed that nuance.

Brandtjen cited a CDC webpage on kids and coronaviru­s which notes that children don’t appear to be at higher risk, and most U.S. cases appear in adults.

She also quoted a Children’s Hospital of Wisconsin news release stating that “one of the main understand­ings was that (COVID-19) didn’t affect healthy kids as seriously as adults.” In the release, the hospital wrote that only a handful of children there tested positive for the virus, and all went home after brief hospitaliz­ations.

The Children’s release, however, brings up another distinctio­n in the conversati­on about kids and COVID-19: a new, more serious disease known as Pediatric Multisyste­m Inflammatory Syndrome, or PIMS.

No kids at Children’s have presented with PIMS symptoms, the release says, and research on the link between PIMS and the coronaviru­s is still limited. But doctors in New York, which as of May 12 was investigat­ing 102 cases of the syndrome and three deaths, suspect COVID-19 is involved. Though rare and treatable, it’s likely another way the virus is affecting kids.

And one more bit of nuance: As schools across the country mull over opening their doors this fall, research is still being done on whether and how much children can spread the virus. The answer could be critical to the discussion of what reopening schools, day care centers and other places where kids gather should look like moving forward.

Our ruling

Brandtjen claimed “Children don’t seem to be getting this virus.”

Hundreds of kids in Wisconsin, and tens of thousands in the U.S., have fallen ill with COVID-19.

That said, children do not seem to be contractin­g the virus as much, or as seriously, as the rest of the population. That’s an important nuance, particular­ly amid such a contentiou­s debate.

We rate Brandtjen’s claim Mostly False.

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