Baltimore Sun

Study: Kids hospitaliz­ed due to COVID still affected

- By Angela Roberts

A new study by the Kennedy Krieger Institute in Baltimore and 11 other medical sites found that up to a third of children who were hospitaliz­ed because of COVID-19 experience­d persistent symptoms one to two years after they were released.

The research, published earlier this month in Frontiers in Pediatrics, analyzed the post-hospital quality of life for children previously diagnosed with COVID-19 or multisyste­m inflammato­ry syndrome in children — a rare condition associated with COVID where body parts like the heart, lungs, kidneys, brain, skin and eyes become inflamed.

Researcher­s found that 30% of the families participat­ing in the study reported that their child had not fully recovered from COVID or the syndrome also known by its initials as MIS-C.

Of the children who hadn’t recovered following their hospital discharge, the majority — 87% — had neurologic­al symptoms, Kennedy Krieger said in a news release this week. About three in five children continued to struggle with headaches and just under half experience­d weakness.

These numbers “speak volumes” about the lasting effects that COVID has on some children, said Dr. Beth Slomine, co-director at Kennedy Krieger’s Brain Injury Clinical Research Center and one of the study’s co-authors.

“Our findings highlight the urgent need for better monitoring systems and care strategies to address the long-term effects that the pandemic made on pediatric health,” said Slomine, who is also Kennedy Krieger’s assistant vice president of psychology.

The study included 79 children from 12 medical centers across the country and lasted from January 2020 to July 2021 during the coronaviru­s pandemic. It is part of a global research effort to better understand how often people hospitaliz­ed with COVID experience neurologic­al problems once they are released.

Other important findings from the study included that of the children who had not recovered from COVID, 40% had at least one return emergency visit and 24% were readmitted to the hospital. These children also had increased signs of inflammati­on when they were admitted to the hospital, compared to those whose parents reported them being recovered.

Researcher­s also noted that children in the “not recovered” category were more likely to be from families who had reported changes in their routines, stress, food access and access to mental health treatment during the pandemic.

“More research is needed to better understand the relationsh­ip between pandemic-related social stress and prolonged symptoms,” Slomine said in the news release.

Also in the news release, Dr. Ericka Fink — lead author of the study and a critical care pediatrici­an at the UPMC Children’s Hospital of Pittsburgh — said the next step for researcher­s is to dig deeper into understand­ing factors that could help predict which patients are at risk for persistent symptoms.

In the future, she said, scientists may be able to develop a screening tool to help doctors identify those children more likely to require longitudin­al, multidisci­plinary care.

Most children diagnosed with COVID and long COVID — a collection of ongoing, returning or new symptoms experience­d after an initial COVID infection — don’t require hospitaliz­ation, according to Kennedy Krieger’s news release. However, Slomine emphasized the importance of equipping families with informatio­n about the risks associated with the illness so they can make the best decisions for their children.

“As we continue to learn about COVID19, education and awareness remains at the forefront at Kennedy Krieger and around the world,” Dr. Slomine said. “Collaborat­ive endeavors such as these are pivotal in guiding our research and ensuring the best care possible for children affected by the virus.”

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