Compared with adults, children infected with the coronavirus are
less likely to have symptoms and more likely to have a mild
illness, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's
(CDC) analysis also found.
That confirms published studies from China, where the virus
originated, suggesting the illness known as COVID-19 might be
overlooked in children even as they are spreading it to adults.
Although children under age 18 make up 22% of the U.S.
population, they accounted for only 1.7% of the 149,082
confirmed COVID-19 cases for which the patient's age was known,
researchers wrote in the CDC's Morbidity and Mortality Weekly
Report.
Up to 2% of infected children required intensive care unit
admission, the analysis found.
The rates for children are significantly lower than for adults
under age 65, up to a third of whom require hospitalization,
with up to 4.5% needing intensive care.
CDC researchers emphasize the findings are still based on
incomplete data, as most cases lacked information on disease
symptoms, severity or patients' underlying conditions.
Despite the limitations, the data show COVID-19 may be producing
different symptoms in the young.
While 56% of children for whom data was available had fever, the
rate was 71% in adults. Cough was a symptom in 54% of kids
versus 80% of adults. Shortness of breath developed in 13% of
those under 18 versus 43% of adults under age 65.
Muscle aches and pains, sore throat, headache, and diarrhea were
also less common in children.
One child who tested positive for the disease had no symptoms at
all. Three infected children have died.
More than 355,000 people in the United States have tested
positive for the disease, with coronavirus-related deaths
crossing the 10,000 mark on Monday.
Among all the 2,572 cases in U.S. children through April 2, 33%
were in New York City, 23% were from the rest of New York, 15%
were in New Jersey and 29% were from the rest of the country.
The first pediatric case in the U.S. was reported to the CDC on
March 2.
(Reporting by Gene Emery; editing by Nancy Lapid and Bill
Berkrot)
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