Feature

Decline in child COVID-19 cases picks up after 2-week slowdown


 

The number of new COVID-19 cases in children dropped by 17.1% in the latest reporting week, after 2 consecutive weeks of relatively small declines, according to data gathered by the American Academy of Pediatrics and the Children’s Hospital Association.

Number of weekly COVID-19 cases in children, United States

From Feb. 19 to March 4, the drop in new cases averaged just 5% each week, compared with 13.3% per week over the 5-week period from Jan. 15 to Feb. 18. For the week of March 5-11, a total of 52,695 COVID-19 cases were reported in children, down from 63,562 the previous week and the lowest number since late October, based on data from 49 states (excluding New York), the District of Columbia, New York City, Puerto Rico, and Guam.

In those jurisdictions, 3.28 million children have been infected with SARS-CoV-2, representing 13.2% of all cases since the beginning of the pandemic. The cumulative rate of COVID-19 has now risen to 4,364 cases per 100,000 children nationally, with state rates ranging from 1,062 per 100,000 in Hawaii to 8,692 per 100,000 in North Dakota, the AAP and CHA said in their weekly COVID-19 report.

Hospitalization data are more limited – 24 states and New York City – but continue to show that serious illness is much less common in younger individuals: Children represent just 1.9% of all hospitalizations, and only 0.8% of the children who have been infected were hospitalized. Neither rate has changed since early February, the AAP and CHA said.

The number of deaths in children, however, rose from 253 to 266, the largest 1-week increase since early February in the 43 states (along with New York City, Puerto Rico, and Guam) that are tracking mortality data by age, the AAP and CHA reported.

Among those 46 jurisdictions, there are 10 (9 states and the District of Columbia) that have not yet reported a COVID-19–related child death, while Texas has almost twice as many deaths, 47, as the next state, Arizona, which has 24. Meanwhile, California’s total of 452,000 cases is almost 2½ times higher than the 183,000 recorded by Illinois, according to the report.

Recommended Reading

Myth busting: SARS-CoV-2 vaccine
Covid ICYMI
Delay surgery by 7 weeks after COVID-19 diagnosis, study shows
Covid ICYMI
Inpatient sodium imbalances linked to adverse COVID-19 outcomes
Covid ICYMI
Don’t discontinue osteoporosis meds for COVID-19 vaccines, expert guidance says
Covid ICYMI
COVID-related immunization gaps portend return of preventable infections
Covid ICYMI
Let’s apply the lessons from the AIDS crisis to the COVID-19 pandemic
Covid ICYMI
Pregnant patients with severe COVID-19 disease at increased risk of complications
Covid ICYMI
First pill for COVID-19 could be ready by year’s end
Covid ICYMI
Don’t delay: Cancer patients need both doses of COVID vaccine
Covid ICYMI
Blood cancer patients, survivors hesitate over COVID-19 vaccine
Covid ICYMI