A new report from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) confirms that in the majority of juveniles infected with COVID-19, the symptoms are less severe than in adult patients.
The report, Coronavirus Disease 2019 in Children – United States, Feb. 12-April 2,
shows that fewer children with COVID-19, the disease caused by the
novel coronavirus, are hospitalized. Additionally, the report shows that
children with the disease are less likely than adults to experience
fever, cough or shortness of breath. However, the report is quick to
point out that some pediatric patients, those under the age of 18, can
become seriously ill and require hospitalization. At the time the report
was released Monday, there had been three juveniles in the United
States who died from COVID-19.
The CDC findings were based on an analysis of 2,572 known juvenile
cases of COVID-19 that were part of a batch of 149,760
laboratory-confirmed COVID-19 cases, the CDC said. The median age of
pediatric patients in the study was 11 years old. The data from the CDC
analysis confirms what had originally been reported from China when the
outbreak of COVID-19 began. In China, data suggested that pediatric
COVID-19 cases might be less severe than adult cases and that children
might experience different symptoms than adults.
In its analysis, the CDC said 73% of pediatric patients had symptoms
of fever, cough or shortness of breath compared with 93% of adults aged
18–64 years during the same period. When looking at the symptoms
individually, 56% of pediatric patients reported fever, 54% reported
cough and 13% reported shortness of breath, the CDC said.
The data used included different variables, including hospitalization
status, underlying conditions and overall disease symptoms. But, some
of the information that was available for these variables was low. For
the symptoms, the researchers only had data for about 10% of the 2,572
patients and only knew about underlying conditions in 13% of them.
Underlying conditions included asthma, immunosuppression and
cardiovascular disease. The researchers also only had hospitalization
information for about one-third, 33%, of the pediatric patients.
But, what those hospitalization rates showed is that juveniles were
hospitalized less than adults. According to the analysis, 5.7% of all
pediatric patients, or 20% of those for whom hospitalization status was
known, were hospitalized, the CDC said. That was lower than the rates
for adults. The data shows that adult patients aged 18 to 64 were
hospitalized 33% of the time. Children under the age of 1 year accounted
for the highest percentage of hospitalization among pediatric patients
with COVID-19. Those youngest patients represented 15% to 62% of all
children and pediatric patients hospitalized, the CDC said.
“These data support previous findings that children with COVID-19
might not have reported fever or cough as often as do adults. Whereas
most COVID-19 cases in children are not severe, serious COVID-19 illness
resulting in hospitalization still occurs in this age group,” the CDC
said.
While pediatric patients may have less severe symptoms of the
disease, the CDC said social distancing recommendations and other
preventative measures are critically important to slow the spread of the
disease.
Among the 2,572 pediatric cases used for the research, 850 (33%) were
from New York City where the outbreak has been severe; 584 (23%) were
from the rest of New York state; 393 (15%) were from New Jersey, and the
remaining 745 (29%) were from other states and U.S. territories.
https://www.biospace.com/article/cdc-report-confirms-preliminary-reports-that-covid-19-is-less-severe-in-pediatric-patients/
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