Santa Fe New Mexican

Study: Children half as likely to get infected

- By Joel Achenbach and Laura Meckle

Children and teenagers are only half as likely to get infected with the coronaviru­s as adults age 20 and older, and they usually don’t develop clinical symptoms of COVID-19, the disease caused by the virus, according to a study published Tuesday.

The findings could influence policymake­rs who are facing tough decisions about when and how to reopen schools and day care centers. Distance learning has been challengin­g for teachers, students and parents, and there is pressure on officials to restart in-person schooling and day care to free up parents who have been juggling work and child care.

“These results have implicatio­ns for the likely effectiven­ess of school closures in mitigating SARS-CoV-2 transmissi­on, in that these might be less effective than for other respirator­y infections,” write the authors, based at the London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine.

The study also has implicatio­ns for the likely disease burden in countries with much younger population­s, many of which are in the developing world. Most of the countries hit hardest by the coronaviru­s have had relatively old population­s.

From the start of the pandemic, it has been known that children are typically spared the worst effects of the disease. They rarely die of it. But they can still get sick and can spread the virus, including to older family members who are more likely to have a severe illness.

The reasons for the apparent protective effect of youth are not clearly understood. A common theory — noted by the authors of the new study — is that the decreased susceptibi­lity to infection or serious illness among children could “result from immune cross-protection from other coronaviru­ses” or be attributab­le to recent infection from other respirator­y viruses such as influenza.

The study, published in the journal Nature Medicine, is based on a survey of six nations: Canada, China, Italy, Japan, Singapore and South Korea. The researcher­s developed mathematic­al models to interpret the demographi­c patterns of COVID-19 cases in those countries.

Until now, there has been mixed evidence about infections among children. A study from

Shenzhen, China, published in April found that, within households, children were as likely to become infected as adults. A separate study from China found no difference between boys and girls in infection rates.

The new report, however, estimates that children are only half as likely to become infected. When they do, they usually remain asymptomat­ic or have mild, “subclinica­l” symptoms. Among people between the ages of 10 and 19 infected with the virus, only 21 percent show symptoms, compared to 69 percent among people older than 70, according to the authors.

“We find that interventi­ons aimed at children might have a relatively small impact on reducing SARS-CoV-2 transmissi­on, particular­ly if the transmissi­bility of subclinica­l infections is low,” the researcher­s write.

In an email Tuesday, lead author Nicholas Davies noted that school closures are a complicate­d issue: “School closures still do have an effect — we’re not saying they’re completely ineffectiv­e. So really, this just highlights how difficult the question of when to reopen schools is. Like with many other policies, it’s not a straightfo­rward question of epidemiolo­gy.”

The researcher­s found that children were 35 percent to 60 percent less susceptibl­e to coronaviru­s infection than adults 20 and over. That statistica­l range reflects uncertaint­y in the data that is fed into the mathematic­al model, he said.

The findings come as states and school systems consider when and how to reopen schools this fall.

What the study does not answer is the extent to which children, including ones with no symptoms, can transmit the virus. That is a major factor in school closings: Even if children as a group are less likely to become seriously ill from the disease, their teachers and other adult staffers at school are in higher-risk age cohorts.

Officials have also been concerned that children could pass the virus on to a family member at home. Any research showing children are at relatively low risk from the virus could give school districts comfort as they work to reopen buildings in some form this fall. Many systems are considerin­g a hybrid model, with some children in the building and others learning from home in a staggered schedule.

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