The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Study: Black, Hispanic kids hit harder by virus

- By Nicholas Rondinone

Similar to trends seen in adults, COVID- 19 disproport­ionately impacts Black and Hispanic children, according to a new study from researcher­s at Yale University.

The study, which looked at more than 250 cases from hospitals in Connecticu­t, New York and New Jersey, found that nearly three- quarters of all children hospitaliz­ed with serious cases of the virus were Black or Hispanic. Of those cases, 51% were Hispanic, while 23% were Black, researcher­s discovered.

Researcher­s are continuing to look into what is driving these inequities, the university said, but some informatio­n points to socioecono­mic status as a key factor.

One of the researcher­s, Dr. Carlos Oliveira, assistant professor of pediatrics and director of congenital infectious diseases at Yale New Haven Children’s Hospital, said he believes the children are getting the virus from their parents, who are essential workers.

“The first COVID- 19 patient I took care of was a Hispanic teenager with respirator­y disease,” Oliveira said in a news release. “As we were about to intubate him, we learned that his father, who was in his late 30s, was placed on a ventilator a few hours prior, and his mother was just beginning to show signs of COVID- 19.”

Similar studies have shown that a higher number of Black and Hispanic adults are hospitaliz­ed with severe cases of the virus. A recent American Heart Associatio­n study found that number to be 60% of all hospitaliz­ations.

The Yale study, published in the Journal of Pediatrics, also discovered a disparity in how the virus affects children based on race. The majority of children with severe respirator­y symptoms were Hispanic teenagers with existing health issues, while Black children were more likely to present with multisyste­m inflammato­ry syndrome, which manifests two to four weeks after an initial infection, according to the university.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States