Protect the children! As they had back to school, a reminder that covid is not benign, even in children.
Very incomplete data set (>1.13 people have died in US and this only accounts for 996,981), but still we see 2,292 deaths in children 17 and under.🧵
https://t.co/La829oQzencovid.cdc.gov/covid-data-tra…
Covid is now a leading cause of death in all age groups and the only infectious cause in most. Most children with severe outcomes have no underlying condition or common ones like asthma, obesity or being born premature. Of course, death isn't the only bad outcome we worry about.
It's worth noting that we have a much bigger blind spot when it comes to understanding the disease process and progress in children because most of the research has focused on adults. Children are not small adults! We still have a lot to learn. covid19treatmentguidelines.nih.gov/management/cli…
Don't forget about MIS-C, a very serious multi-system inflammatory condition that can happen several weeks after the initial COVID infection, even if that initial infection was mild. Many of these children need support in the ICU. Very difficult on child and family.
How common is MIS-C? We don't know because reporting from the local health jurisdictions to CDC is completely voluntary. But there have been 9,499 reported cases, including 79 deaths. Something tells me the geographic distribution is related to reporting, not true incidence.
The median age of patients with MIS-C was 9 years old, and half were between 5 and 13.
57% of children with reported MIS-C where race was known were Black or Latino. We do not know why this very significant disproportionality is happening. covid.cdc.gov/covid-data-tra…
Keep a close eye on children in the months-weeks after covid infection! Not just for MIS-C but also long and post covid. Long covid is likely happening at a similar rate in kids. Kids are supposed to have decades of quality life ahead of them and have more time for reinfections.
Children under 18 are 2.5 times more likely to be *newly diagnosed with diabetes* in the months after COVID infection compared to those without COVID, and even to those with other respiratory infections before the pandemic. This is not the flu!
https://t.co/75DMmKujapcdc.gov/diabetes/libra…
All children should have a physician visit BEFORE resuming sports/physical activity or within 2-4 weeks of a positive COVID test, whichever is sooner. We don’t want kids to return to sports prematurely, especially given the risk of myocarditis. AAP's Return to Play algorithm:
You can't get MIS-C, long covid, post covid events, etc. if you don't get covid. Avoiding infection and reinfection is the best strategy! Do what you can to assess and advocate for clean indoor air at school. Wear a high-quality mask, eat outside. Keep sick kids home.
When a child gets covid, please let them rest and fully recover, and keep a close eye on them in the subsequent weeks to months.
I really do worry that our younger generations will wonder why we didn't do more to protect them. We can and must do better by our children. 🙏🏾❤️
I review this topic and cover the current covid uptick in this week's People's Health Briefing.
One more thing to note: the vast majority of children will not require outpatient treatment for covid, but some could benefit. Make a treatment plan ahead of time with your pediatrician or specialist for high-risk children.
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Welcome to the phase of the pandemic where "we have the tools" but are removing *access* to the tools.
"At least 3,289,000 Medicaid enrollees have been disenrolled as of July 21, 2023," (35 states + DC)
Texas in the lead with a disenrolled rate of 82%. https://t.co/De4uco40Elkff.org/medicaid/issue…
"Across all states with available data, 74% of all people disenrolled had their coverage terminated for procedural reasons."
So they're likely still eligible but kicked off due to red tape. Seems like a good argument to maintain continuous coverage and find a better "procedure."
~225,0000 Californians lost coverage as of July 1 in the first round of the Medi-Cal renewal process (suspended early in the pandemic). This is ~21% of the >1 million people who were due to reapply. Under 3% of these people no longer qualify for Medi-Cal.
Who should get a bivalent booster now? If you're 65+ or immunocompromised, a 2nd bivalent has been an option since April. Since then, we've learned that an updated booster will likely be here in September. We'll go back to a monovalent vaccine, now against one of the XBBs.🧵
Hopefully we're still dealing with all XBB in September! Either way, the monovalent will likely be much better coverage than the current bivalent, which consists of old & older strains. The bivalent will still provide protection, but it's presumably quite inferior. So what to do?
Unfortunately, we have no guidelines yet on the fall booster (who, how often, etc.). So those currently eligible for a 2nd bivalent are having to decide what to do without this important info. Less than ideal, but I hope walking through the considerations and caveats will help:
Who is still dying from COVID? Thankfully, covid deaths continue to decrease, but we're still seeing >500 per week. Given a lack of testing, this is likely an undercount, but it's still the most accurate covid metric we have. Here's a closer look at covid deaths so far in 2023🧵
In at least 69% of 2023 US covid deaths, covid was the *main* cause, and it was a *contributing* cause in the remainder. The most frequently listed comorbidities are common conditions, including hypertension and diabetes. https://t.co/Zvh7YZWx9Mcdc.gov/nchs/covid19/m…
70% of deaths were in 75+ (88% in 65+), but it has spared no age group. Death rates of unvaccinated are significantly higher than vaccinated, but both groups are represented here. Note: 94.4% of those >65 have received a primary series, and 43.3% have received a bivalent booster.
Many parts of the US are seeing wastewater upticks. Here are 4 good resources - you may be able to locate a sewershed near you. Oakland wastewater is showing a clear uptick.
Unfortunately we don't have ED visits by county, and reporting of this metric seems patchy. Still, all things being equal, an upward trend is an indication of increasing covid. Here we see a slight upward trend over the last couple of weeks (thru 7/14).
https://t.co/Y5LBwejIbicovid.cdc.gov/covid-data-tra…
Things continue to slowly improve, but we still have >6000 hospital admissions and >500 deaths weekly in the US due to COVID. Many of these could be prevented with timely testing and treatment. 25 min briefing on current covid status, real-world data on home covid tests & more.👇🏾
This study looked at serial antigen tests every 48 hrs and PCR. 154 people were PCR+. Ag tests are most reliable in symptomatic individuals. A single test was 82.5% sensitive. Sensitivity increased to 93.4% if conducted twice, 94.3% if conducted 3 times. acpjournals.org/doi/10.7326/M2…
Sensitivity was significantly lower for those without symptoms. For a single test, sensitivity was 34.4%. For two tests, it was 55.3%, and for 3 tests, it was 68.5%. But the negatives did correspond to higher cycle thresholds, meaning relatively less virus.
Uncovering the obvious: "Stopping universal admission testing in the national health systems of 2 countries (England and Scotland) was associated with significant increases in hospital-onset SARS-CoV-2 infections relative to community-onset infections." 🧵 jamanetwork.com/journals/jamai…
"Potential mechanisms include more unrecognized present-on-admission infections causing transmissions to other patients and health care workers, who in turn infected other patients."
Ya think? With abandonment of masks on top of everything else this is likely just getting worse.
"Hospitals should exercise caution before stopping universal admission testing for SARS-CoV-2 infections."
We have the tools, and we're refusing to use them. 3/4