News from the FDA/CDC

Children and COVID: Weekly cases close out August with a second straight increase


 

The end of August brought a small-but-second-consecutive increase in weekly COVID-19 cases among children, according to a report from the American Academy of Pediatrics and the Children’s Hospital Association.

New cases rose by 4.6% for the week of Aug. 26 to Sept. 1, following a week in which cases increased by almost 9%, as the second half of August basically reversed the two consecutive weeks of decreases during the first half of the month, based on the AAP/CHA data collected from state and territorial health departments.

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

Similar trends can be seen for emergency department visits, with the exception of children aged 0-11 years, whose ED visit rates have continued to fall since late July. Children aged 12-15, however, had a 7-day average of 4.4% of ED visits with diagnosed COVID on Aug. 25, compared with 3.1% for Aug. 12. Children aged 16-17 years were at 3.4% on Aug. 27, compared with 3.1% as late as Aug. 15, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported.

Hospital admissions with confirmed COVID-19, reported only for children aged 0-17 years, also reflect the late-August trend of increased cases. New hospitalizations dropped from 0.46 per 100,000 population on July 30 to 0.40 per 100,000 on Aug. 19 but have since risen to 0.44 per 100,000 as of Aug. 27, the CDC said on its COVID Data Tracker.

Initial vaccinations, meanwhile, have declined since early August for all children, according to a separate report from the AAP. A look at CDC data for two specific days – the first and last Mondays of the month – shows that those aged under 5 received 12,982 doses on Aug. 1, compared with 5,824 doses on Aug. 29. Over that same time, initial vaccinations in 5- to 11-year-olds went from 9,058 to 2,879, while among those aged 12-17 they dropped from 4,245 to 1,226.

Cumulatively, 5.5% of all children under age 5 had received at least one dose and 1.3% were fully vaccinated by Aug. 30, compared with 38.1% and 30.7%, respectively, of those aged 5-11 and 70.7% and 60.5% of 12- to 17-year-olds, the CDC said.

Recommended Reading

COVID-19 vaccine safe in patients with heart failure
MDedge Family Medicine
Paxlovid reduces risk of COVID death by 79% in older adults
MDedge Family Medicine
Autoimmune disease patients’ waxing, waning response to COVID vaccination studied in-depth
MDedge Family Medicine
How do you live with COVID? One doctor’s personal experience
MDedge Family Medicine
Children and COVID: New cases increase; hospital admissions could follow
MDedge Family Medicine
FDA authorizes updated COVID boosters to target newest variants
MDedge Family Medicine
Many young kids with COVID may show no symptoms
MDedge Family Medicine
CDC gives final approval to Omicron COVID-19 vaccine boosters
MDedge Family Medicine
Asymptomatic infections drive many epidemics, including monkeypox, polio, and COVID
MDedge Family Medicine
COVID-19 vaccination recap: The latest developments
MDedge Family Medicine