Orlando Sentinel

30 children hospitaliz­ed in Central Florida

Six are being treated in intensive-care units

- By Caroline Catherman Orlando Sentinel

Central Florida’s children’s hospitals report that about 30 are hospitaliz­ed with COVID-19, including six in their intensive-care units.

About 12 children are hospitaliz­ed with COVID-19 at AdventHeal­th for Children, Dr. Michael Keating, the hospital’s chief medical officer, said at a Thursday news briefing. At Nemours Children’s Hospital, nine children are hospitaliz­ed, with four in the ICU, according to Dr. Adriana Cadilla. Orlando Health’s hospitals report nine pediatric patients, with one in the ICU, said spokespers­on Desmond Jordon.

“I wish there were none, and there was a time when there was none, when we were doing the

right things last year. When we were masking and social distancing, we were keeping everybody safe,” Keating said.

Over 90% of all hospitaliz­ed patients, children or adults, are unvaccinat­ed at Orlando Health and AdventHeal­th. Nemours did not share its patients’ vaccinatio­n data. About 41% of eligible children over 12 years old are vaccinated in Florida, as of Aug. 5.

The majority of children who get COVID-19 never end up in the hospital. Over 27,000 Florida children ages 0-19 tested positive for COVID-19 last week, according to the Florida Department of Health’s weekly report.

Yet, some children can face complicati­ons such as pneumonia. Though rare, they may require supplement­al oxygen, steroids and Remdesivir, a medication that stops the virus from spreading throughout the body. Keating has also seen over 60 cases of Multisyste­m Inflammato­ry Syndrome, a rare complicati­on that can occur several weeks after a COVID-19 case in children.

Severe COVID-19 can strike anyone, but some children are at higher risk of becoming severely ill. Adolescent­s and teenagers react to infection similarly to adults. Keating has also seen a large number of Hispanic children with COVID-19, which he said reflects the community’s population. Many of the children hospitaliz­ed have pre-existing conditions such as morbid obesity or chronic lung disease, said Dr. Federico Ricardo Laham, medical director for pediatric infectious diseases at Orlando Health.

Cases are rising in adults too, and Keating worries that children could catch the virus at school then give it to their caregivers. Many kids are symptom-free. Masks are a simple solution, and Keating has found that children easily adapt to wearing them.

About 4% of students at Orange County public schools opted out of wearing masks this year.

“When kids come into my office I say, ‘look, this is your daily hygiene: You brush your teeth, you comb your hair, you put on your mask,’ and they get it. I don’t get any pushback,” Keating said.

About 1,580 adults are hospitaliz­ed throughout AdventHeal­th’s Central Florida system as of Thursday, a jump of over 200 from the week before, and a jump of over 500 from two weeks ago.

About 660 adults are hospitaliz­ed at Orlando Health hospitals with COVID-19, with almost one out of six, 101, in the ICU, according to Jordon.

“The beat goes on, and it’s the beat of a war drum,” Keating said. “The surge continues and we’ve got to blunt that surge. We’re in a war.”

If the virus continues to spread, it may mutate into a variant that brings more severe infection to children, Keating said. The current dominant strain, delta, is more contagious but does not seem to be more severe.

Alongside wearing masks, Keating urged everyone to get vaccinated as soon as possible, calling COVID-19 the biggest tragedy of his lifetime. Prior infection is not sufficient protection, he added.

“Go out, get vaccinated, mask your child,” he said. “That’s what Americans do. They do what’s good for the whole. Let’s stop and think a little bit less about ourselves, and whatever beliefs we might have, and think about what’s best for the whole.”

 ?? ADVENTHEAL­TH/ COURTESY PHOTO ?? Central Florida’s children’s hospitals report that about 30 are hospitaliz­ed with COVID-19, including six in their intensivec­are units.
ADVENTHEAL­TH/ COURTESY PHOTO Central Florida’s children’s hospitals report that about 30 are hospitaliz­ed with COVID-19, including six in their intensivec­are units.

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