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Amid Low COVID Vaccine Rates, More California Children Hospitalized in Omicron Surge - Lost Coast Outpost

Amid Low COVID Vaccine Rates, More California Children Hospitalized in Omicron Surge - Lost Coast Outpost

Amid Low COVID Vaccine Rates, More California Children Hospitalized in Omicron Surge - Lost Coast Outpost
Jan 18, 2022 1 min, 41 secs

The state has tallied nearly 850,000 cases of COVID among kids 0 to 17 since the beginning of the pandemic.

This peak in hospitalizations of kids across the state has surpassed records set during last winter’s surge, said California Health and Human Services Secretary Dr.

But they are advising families to revisit early pandemic precautions about limiting get-togethers, avoiding unnecessary activities and protecting their youngest and most vulnerable family members by masking, social distancing and getting vaccinated.

In Orange County, a child under 5 died from COVID complications in December, the county’s health agency said last week.

Colleen Kraft, a pediatrician at Children’s Hospital Los Angeles, worries about the number of sick kids because even a small percentage could mean thousands of ill children.

At her hospital in the Hollywood area of Los Angeles, 41 children are currently admitted and a quarter of them are in the intensive care unit, she said.

She is most concerned about children who are not vaccinated, especially those under 5.

Colleen Kraft, pediatrician, Children’s Hospital Los Angeles.

In California, 65% of children aged 12 to 17 are vaccinated, while just 19% of youngsters aged 5 to 11 are vaccinated, according to state data.

A little more than a week later she landed in the hospital after a 10-day stretch of non-stop fever that reached 104.9, fatigue and a positive COVID test, said her mom, Lindsey Zermeno.

“It felt incredibly scary,” said Lindsey Zermeno, a nurse at Children’s Hospital Orange County where her daughter was admitted.

Adeline spent two nights in the hospital with ear and sinus infections brought on by COVID and is still dealing with a lingering viral rash.

There have been 783 MIS-C cases in California during the pandemic.

Angela Dangvu, a pediatrician at the Children’s Hospital of Orange County Primary Care Network who works at an off-site clinic.

In addition to the risk of MIS-C, children who have had COVID are also at risk of what has been dubbed “long COVID” and, separately, an increased risk for diabetes, according to a new study from the CDC

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