Rotorua Daily Post

Record Delta wave hits US children, raising fears as schools reopen

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The day before he was supposed to start fourth grade, Francisco Rosales was admitted to a Dallas hospital with Covid-19, struggling to breathe, with dangerousl­y low oxygen levels and an uncertain outcome.

It wasn’t supposed to be like this, thought his frightened mother, Yessica Gonzalez. Francisco was normally healthy and rambunctio­us. At 9, he was too young to get vaccinated, but most of the family had their shots. She had heard kids rarely got sick from the coronaviru­s.

But with the highly contagious Delta variant spreading across the US, children are filling hospital intensive care beds instead of classrooms in record numbers, more even than at the height of the pandemic. Many are too young to get the vaccine, which is available only to those 12 and over.

The surging virus is spreading anxiety and causing turmoil and infighting among parents, administra­tors and politician­s around the US, especially in states like Florida and Texas, where Republican governors have barred schools from making youngsters wear masks.

With millions of children returning to classrooms this month, experts say the stakes are unquestion­ably high.

Very high infection rates in the community “are really causing our children’s hospitals to feel the squeeze,” said Dr Buddy Creech, a Vanderbilt University infectious disease specialist who is a helping lead research on Moderna’s vaccine for children under 12. Creech said those shots probably won’t be available for several months.

“I’m really worried,” said Dr Sonja Rasmussen, a pediatrici­an and public health expert at the University of Florida. “It’s just so disappoint­ing to see those numbers back up again.”

While pediatric Covid-19 hospitalis­ation rates are lower than those for adults, they have surged in recent weeks, reaching 0.41 per 100,000 children ages 0 to 17, compared with 0.31 per 100,000, the previous high set in mid-january, according to an August 13 report from the Centres for Disease Control and Prevention.

Dr Francis Collins, head of the National Institutes of Health, calls the spike in cases among children “very worrisome”.

He noted that more than 400 US children have died of Covid-19 since the pandemic began. “And right now we have almost 2000 kids in the hospital, many of them in ICU, some of them under the age of 4,” Collins said.

Health experts believe unvaccinat­ed adults are contributi­ng to the surge among grownups and children alike.

It has been especially bad in places with lower vaccinatio­n rates, such as parts of the South.

While it is clear the Delta variant is much more contagious than the original version, scientists are not yet able to say with any certainty whether it makes people more severely ill or whether youngsters are especially vulnerable to it.

As experts work to answer those questions, many hospitals are reeling.

Those in Texas are among the hardest hit. On Wednesday, they reported 196 children being treated with confirmed Covid-19. That compares with 163 during the previous peak, in December.

At Texas Children’s Hospital in Houston, the nation’s largest pediatric hospital, the number of youngsters treated for Covid-19 is at an all-time high, said Dr Jim Versalovic, interim pediatrici­an-inchief.

In recent weeks, the vast majority have had Delta infections, and most patients 12 and up have not had shots, he said.

“It is spreading like wildfire across our communitie­s,” he said.

At times this month, his hospital system has diagnosed 200 children with Covid-19 a day, with about 6 per cent of them needing hospital care. On some days, the number of children in the hospital with Covid-19 has exceeded 45.

Versalovic said he suspects hospitalis­ations of children are up simply because so many are getting infected, not because the Delta variant makes people more seriously ill.

At Children’s Medical Centre in Dallas, where Francisco is being treated, the number of patients with Covid-19 climbed from 10 during the week of July 4 to 29 during the week of August 8.

Francisco is improving and expected to recover, but his mother is worried and is considerin­g homeschool­ing him. The virus “is really dangerous,” she said. AP

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