Surge in Covid cases among children fuels fears
over US school reopenings
Experts challenge ‘myth’ that kids are not at risk as
new study adds to worrying reports from schools and camps
Mario Koran
in Oakland
Fri 14 Aug
2020 11.00 BSTLast modified on Fri 14 Aug 2020 19.54 BST
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2020/aug/14/school-reopenings-covid-19-coronavirus-us
An
exponential rise in Covid-19 cases among children in the US has raised the
alarm among experts as the new school year begins.
A recently
released study from the American Academy of Pediatrics and the Children’s Hospital
Association found that nearly 339,000 coronavirus cases among children have
been reported across the nation since the start of the pandemic, with 97,000
cases reported just in the last two weeks of July.
The
findings add concern to troubling reports emerging from places that moved early
to reopen schools. The day after classes resumed for one Georgia school
district, a second-grade student tested positive for coronavirus, sending his
teacher and classmates home for a two-week quarantine. The same week, Georgia’s
department of health confirmed the death of a seven-year-old boy, the state’s
youngest to die from the virus. He had no underlying health conditions.
Linda
Rosenstock, a professor of health policy and dean emeritus of UCLA’s Fielding
School of Public Health, said the surge in cases among young people was a
reflection of the widespread toll the virus has taken across the country.
“A fair
interpretation of this data is that as cases rise, more children are infected.
In the same way the lockdown helped slow the rise, when restrictions were
loosened, we saw more cases overall,” said Rosenstock.
“It
reflects the state of the pandemic that is running unabated in the US at the
moment,” she added. “If you try to reopen in places where the disease is
raging, we’d see a rise of cases among children.”
Rosenstock
said the fact that fewer children were tested earlier in the pandemic may have
fueled a “myth” that children were not at risk of infection. While research
suggests that children tend to have milder symptoms than adults, she said the
new data attests to the fact children can still infect adults, whose symptoms
can be more severe.
The
findings undercut assumptions that children are unlikely to catch and spread
coronavirus to adults and other children – a claim Donald Trump seized on to
make a case that schools should reopen for in-person instruction this fall.
What we
know about kids and coronavirus in the US
The
nation’s understanding of how coronavirus affects kids has evolved during the
pandemic. Experts say the new study further confirms that children can play a
significant role in spreading the virus and that, in rare cases, infections can
lead to severe illness or death among youth.
Nationally,
children represent 8.8% of all Covid infections, according to the report from
the American Academy of Pediatrics. About 70% of the new cases reported among
children in July came from states in the south and west, where coronavirus has
ripped through the population.
California,
which late last month saw its first death of a child due to Covid, has reported
more cases than other state. But its share of infected children relative to the
overall population puts in the middle of the pack, just above the national
average. Wyoming, Tennessee and New Mexico top the per-capita infection rates
for children; in all three states, children account for more than 15% of all
cases.
Children
represent less than 4% of hospitalizations from the virus and account for less
than 1% of Covid-related deaths in states that reported results. Twenty states
reported zero child deaths.
Katherine
Williamson, a pediatrician in southern California’s Orange county and a
spokeswoman for the American Academy of Pediatrics, said the findings also
indicated that the virus impacts children differently across age groups.
Children
younger than five tend to be least symptomatic, Williamson said, and outbreaks
among children and teachers at care centers and preschools remain low. The risk
goes up for children aged five to 10, and children over 12 appear to have more
adult-like symptoms, she said.
“The hard
part is that because young children are less symptomatic, we may miss the
symptoms and neglect to test them,” Williamson said.
What it
means for reopening schools
The report
comes as states and regions across the country wrestle with how to safely
reopen schools for in-person instruction this fall, a decision with both
academic implications for children and economic consequences for parents hoping
to find childcare and return to work.
But
cautionary tales have emerged. In late May, days after Israel opened schools,
infections tied to a Jerusalem high school ballooned into a devastating
outbreak.
In Georgia,
a summer camp that opened in late June sparked an outbreak that infected more
than 75% of the 344 campers and staff members who were tested. In that
instance, staff members wore face masks, but children were not required to.
That
responses to the coronavirus are determined by state and local decision-makers
complicates a uniform response to combating the spread of the virus.
In July, on
the same day that school chiefs in Los Angeles and San Diego announced they had
start the school year online, the Orange county board of education recommended
its schools reopen without the use of masks or social distancing. Officials
cited as part of their argument a report that appeared backed by a cadre of
medical experts.
In the days
following the report, however, multiple experts distanced themselves from the
work, saying they had never been consulted for the final report.
The
American Academy of Pediatrics was not consulted for the report, nor does it
endorse the recommendations to return to school without safety measures,
Williamson said.
“We have a
fairly good idea of how to decrease the risk of spreading the virus in schools
through social distancing, masking, hand-washing, and screening for systems
before students enter school,” Williamson said. Just as important, she added,
was consistent enforcement of the safety measures.
“That last
piece is where places got in trouble. They started getting lax about the rules
and then cases went up,” said Williamson.
John
Swartzberg, a clinical professor emeritus of infectious diseases and
vaccinology at UC Berkeley’s school of public health, said the timing of the
case surge highlighted by the report did not bode well for a return to
in-person instruction in the near future.
“The very
significant increase in cases occurred when children were out of school, which
suggests that if we put children back in school, it will exacerbate the
problem,” Swartzberg said.
“Putting
people together – whether they’re children or older adults – is the worst thing
you can do in the face of the pandemic,” he added.
Swartzberg
said that even schools in regions where cases remained low could not completely
eliminate the risk of infections, but they could mitigate that risk through the
use of masks, hand-washing and social distancing.
Mitigation
efforts, however, will cost extra money: additional classrooms would have to be
used to put distance between students, which would require more teachers.
“For the
bulk of public schools in the US, which have been horrifically underfunded for
so long, where are those resources going to come from? At schools I know in the
Bay Area, teachers buy paper and colored pencils for the kids because the
school district can’t do it. And that was before the pandemic,” Swartzberg
said.
“Putting
children back in school, sending students back in universities, is a great
experiment,” he said. “We have no idea what’s going to happen.”

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