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Serious US Children Hospitalization Surge!

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COVID-19 hospitalisation surge among US children spurs new Omicron concerns​

COVID-19 hospitalisation surge among US children spurs new Omicron concerns

FILE PHOTO: Children wait in line for health screenings before entering I.S. 136 Charles O Dewey School during the outbreak of the coronavirus disease (COVID-19) in the Sunset Park area of Brooklyn, New York, U.S., October 8, 2020. REUTERS/Brendan McDermid/File Photo
30 Dec 2021 08:59PM(Updated: 30 Dec 2021 08:59PM)
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NEW YORK: Within weeks, the Omicron variant has fueled thousands of new COVID-19 hospitalisations among US children, raising new concerns about how the many unvaccinated Americans under the age of 18 will fare in the new surge.
The seven-day-average number of daily hospitalisations for children between Dec 21 and Dec 27 is up more than 58 per cent nationwide in the past week to 334, compared to around 19 per cent for all age groups, data from the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention show.


Fewer than 25 per cent of the 74 million Americans under 18 are vaccinated, according to the CDC.
Omicron cases are expected to surge even faster across the United States as schools reopen next week after the winter holiday, experts cautioned.
Doctors say it is too early to determine whether Omicron causes more severe illness in children than other variants of the coronavirus, but that its extremely high transmissibility is one key factor that is driving up hospitalisations.
"It is going to infect more people and it is infecting more people. We've seen numbers go up, we've seen hospitalisations in kids go up," said Dr Jennifer Nayak, an infectious disease expert and paediatrician at the University of Rochester Medical Center.
"What we are seeing is that children under five remain unvaccinated so there's still a relatively large population of children who are naive, so they have no preexisting immunity to this virus," said Nayak.


Even in New York City, which has some of the highest vaccination rates in the United States, only around 40 per cent of five- to 17-year-olds are fully vaccinated compared with more than 80 per cent of adults, city health data shows. There is no authorised vaccine for US children under the age of five.
Hospitalisations in New York City of people aged 18 and younger increased from 22 the week starting Dec 5 to 109 between Dec 19 and Dec 23.
Children under the age of five represented almost half of the total cases. Hospitalisations of people 18 and under in the entire state were at 184 from Dec 19 to Dec 23, up from 70 from Dec 5 to Dec 11.
Other parts of the United States are also seeing a spike in cases among children. Ohio has seen a 125 per cent increase in hospitalisations among children 17 and under in the past four weeks, according to data from the Ohio Hospital Association.
Florida, New Jersey and Illinois have witnessed an increase of at least double in the seven-day average daily hospitalization of underage patients with the coronavirus over the past week, CDC data shows.


SLOW UPTAKE​

Young children have far lower vaccination rates than other age groups, with some families hesitating to introduce a new vaccine to their youngest members.
Fewer than 15 per cent of US children aged five to 11 have been fully vaccinated since Pfizer Inc and BioNTech's COVID-19 shot was authorized for that age group in late October, federal data shows.
Doctors said the more severe COVID-19 symptoms they are seeing in hospitalised children this month include difficulty breathing, high fever, and dehydration.
"They need help breathing, they need help getting oxygen, they need extra hydration. They are sick enough to end up in the hospital, and that's scary for doctors, and it's scary for parents," said Rebecca Madan, a pediatric infectious disease specialist at New York University's Langone Health hospital system.
The surge in cases occurred as schools closed for the winter holidays. Before the vacation, more than a thousand classrooms have been either fully or partially quarantined due to outbreaks, according to New York City data. The city said it will open schools for about a million children as planned on Jan 3, following the district's winter recess.

 

Testing

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Sue Trump the bastard...
Its lunch time, please order your bats, dogs or cats.

I will pass you the code, not problem, and it goes like this:

your_order = []
print("You can order as many items as you wish")
print("-"*30)
:roflmao::biggrin::biggrin:
 
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