UK: +44 1379 658 721
Ireland: +353 89 221 3723
USA: +1 754 252 3536
Middle East - N. Africa: + 971 52 873 4738
Australia: +61 3 9310 5259
The science is clear. Our kids are suffering from 'long covid', and it could lead to lasting health problems.
No wonder some politicians are calling the lack of publicity around kids with long covid a 'national scandal', and no wonder some parents are not happy about the schools in England going back this week.
On the bright side, children seem to be reasonably well-protected from the most severe symptoms of covid-19 itself. Apparently most youngsters are either symptomless or suffer very mild symptoms.
But increasing numbers of kids, whether symptomatic or asymptomatic, are already experiencing long-term effects, 'many months after the initial infection'.
Long covid in children – The symptoms
The symptoms of long covid include fatigue, muscle pain, joint pain, headaches, insomnia, reissues, nausea, dizziness, seizures, hallucinations and even testicular pain. In total the experts reckon there are more than 100 different symptoms.
A recent piece of research showed how 13.3% of adults with symptomatic covid-19 have symptoms lasting more than 28 days, generally getting worse as you get older or are overweight. Long covid is more likely in women than men. And if you suffer from more than five symptoms in the first week, you also have a bigger risk of long covid. But it looks like more than 50% of children aged 6-16 who catch covid have at least one symptom lasting more than 120 days, and 42.6% of them are finding that the symptoms are affecting their daily lives.
Large numbers of our children could suffer long term symptoms
The UK Office for National Statistics says 12.9% of children aged 2 - 11 and 14.5% of those aged 12-16 are still having symptoms five weeks after their first infection. Since March last year almost half a million children have tested positive for covid-19. This is not a happy picture by anyone's standards, and because we have a lot less information than we need about long Covid in children, it's possible we're looking at the tip of an awful iceberg.
While most people of every age recover from the virus within 12 weeks, the UK pressure group 'Long Covid Kids' says they know of 1200 children with long covid from 890 families in England, and the number is rising fast. None of these children have returned to their previous state of health, and most are 'unable to do their normal activities.' Some are still confined to bed, unable to get up for any length of time. Others have been poorly since March 2020. As one parent said, “Although they have bad periods and better periods, they are never well.”
The lack of information on long covid in children is especially important since England's schools re-opened this week. Officials say they don’t have enough data on the long-term impacts to make good policy decisions. In February NICE handed over £1.4 million to a study designed to assess the risk factors and prevalence of long covid in children. No wonder some experts have called sending children back to school un-vaccinated something that invites, “the possibility of giving a whole generation long-term chronic health issues.”
The good news?
Research suggests children don’t easily pass covid-19 to each other in school. The results of at least one study reveal children are more likely to get covid-19 from family members than from their peers or teachers, although the science isn't yet confirmed. Until now, the focus of the pandemic has been preventing severe disease and deaths in older people. But there are growing calls to also look much harder at the potential long term health risks faced by our children.
Our UVC covid disinfection tech will clean an average-sized classroom in minutes. Need we say more?
Let's talk about making your school safer for everyone, of every age.