The News-Times

U.S. children hospitaliz­ed with COVID in record numbers

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The omicron-fueled surge that is sending COVID-19 cases rocketing in the U.S. is putting children in the hospital in record numbers, and experts lament that most of the youngsters are not vaccinated.

“It’s just so heartbreak­ing,” said Dr. Paul Offit, an infectious-disease expert at Children’s Hospital of Philadelph­ia. “It was hard enough last year, but now you know that you have a way to prevent all this.”

During the week of Dec. 22-28, an average of 378 children 17 and under were admitted per day to hospitals with the coronaviru­s, a 66 percent increase from the week before, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported Thursday.

The previous high over the course of the pandemic was in early September, when child hospitaliz­ations averaged 342 per day, the CDC said.

On a more hopeful note, children continue to represent a small percentage of those being hospitaliz­ed with COVID-19: An average of nearly 10,200 people of all ages were admitted per day during the same week in December. And many doctors say the youngsters seem less sick than those who came in during the delta surge over the summer.

Two months after vaccinatio­ns were approved for 5- to 11-year-olds, about 14 percent are fully protected, CDC data shows. The rate is higher for 12- to 17-year-olds, at about 53 percent.

A study released Thursday by the CDC confirmed that serious side effects from the Pfizer vaccine in children ages 5 to 11 are rare. The findings were based on approximat­ely 8 million doses dispensed to youngsters in that age group.

Dr. Albert Ko, professor of epidemiolo­gy and infectious diseases at the Yale School of Public Health, noted that the low vaccinatio­n rate is, in part, a matter of timing: Younger children were not approved for the vaccine until November, and many are only now coming up on their second dose.

Offit said none of the vaccine-eligible children receiving care at his hospital about a week ago had been vaccinated, even though two-thirds had underlying conditions that put them at risk — either chronic lung disease or, more commonly, obesity. Only one was under the vaccinatio­n age of 5.

The scenes are heart-rending.

“They’re struggling to breathe, coughing, coughing, coughing,” Offit said. “A handful were sent to the ICU to be sedated. We put the attachment down their throat that’s attached to a ventilator, and the parents are crying.”

None of the parents or siblings was vaccinated either, he said.

The next four to six weeks are going to be rough, he said: “This is a virus that thrives in the winter.”

Overall, new COVID-19 cases in Americans of all ages have skyrockete­d to the highest levels on record: an average of 300,000 per day, or 21 / 2times the figure just two weeks ago. The highly contagious omicron accounted for 59 percent of new cases last week, according to the CDC.

Still, there are early indication­s that the variant causes milder illness than previous versions, and that the combinatio­n of the vaccine and the booster seems to protect people from its worst effects.

In California, 80 COVID-19infected children were admitted to the hospital during the week of Dec. 20-26, compared with 50 in the last week of November, health officials said.

Seattle Children’s also reported a bump in the number of children admitted over the past week. And while they are less seriously ill than those hospitaliz­ed over the summer, Dr. John McGuire cautioned that it is early in the omicron wave, and the full effects will become apparent over the next several weeks.

New York health authoritie­s have also sounded the alarm.

The number of children admitted to the hospital per week in New York City with COVID-19 went from 22 to 109 between Dec. 5 and Dec. 24. Across all of New York state, it went from 70 to 184. Overall, almost 5,000 people in New York were in the hospital with COVID-19.

“A fourfold increase makes everybody jump with concern, but it’s a small percentage,“Ko said of the New York City figures. “Children have a low risk of being hospitaliz­ed, but those who do are unvaccinat­ed.“

COVID-19 deaths have proved rare among children over the course of the pandemic. As of last week, 721 in the U.S. had died of the disease, according to data reported to the American Academy of Pediatrics. The overall U.S. death toll is more than 800,000.

Almost 199,000 child COVID-19 cases were reported during the week of Dec. 16-23, the pediatrics group said. That was about 20 percent of the more than 950,000 total cases recorded that week.

While many of these children will recover at home, they may have contact with others who are at much greater risk, said Dr. Jason Terk, a pediatrici­an in North Texas. He cared for a 10-year-old boy with COVID-19 who managed the disease well, but his father got sick and died, he said.

“The death of a parent is devastatin­g, but the toxic stress for a young person in this situation is difficult to measure,” he said.

 ?? Paul Vernon / Associated Press ?? Retired registered nurse Jill Rill, right, puts a bandage on Jackson Stukus, 11, after he received a Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine as his mom Kristin looks on during the first COVID-19 vaccine clinic in Franklin County for children age 5-11 at Nationwide Children's Hospital in Columbus, Ohio, on Nov. 3. The omicron-fueled surge that is sending COVID-19 cases rocketing in the U.S. is putting children in the hospital in close to record numbers, and experts lament that most of the youngsters are not vaccinated.
Paul Vernon / Associated Press Retired registered nurse Jill Rill, right, puts a bandage on Jackson Stukus, 11, after he received a Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine as his mom Kristin looks on during the first COVID-19 vaccine clinic in Franklin County for children age 5-11 at Nationwide Children's Hospital in Columbus, Ohio, on Nov. 3. The omicron-fueled surge that is sending COVID-19 cases rocketing in the U.S. is putting children in the hospital in close to record numbers, and experts lament that most of the youngsters are not vaccinated.

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