The majority of kids who die from COVID-19 are children of color

A child washes her hands at a day care center in Connecticut last month. A detailed look at COVID-19 deaths in U.S. kids and young adults by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention shows the great majority are children of color.
A child washes her hands at a day care center in Connecticut last month. A detailed look at COVID-19 deaths in U.S. kids and young adults by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention shows the great majority are children of color.
Jessica Hill | AP

The vast majority of children dying from COVID-19 are Hispanic, Black or Native American, according to a new report from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Researchers analyzed the number of coronavirus cases and deaths among people under the age of 21 that were reported to the CDC between February 12 and July 31 of this year. They found more than 390,000 cases and 121 deaths.

They also found a staggering racial disparity. Seventy-eight percent of the children who died were children of color: 45 percent were Hispanic, 29 percent were Black and 4 percent were non-Hispanic American Indian or Alaska Native.

"It's heartbreaking," says Dr. Preeti Malani, an infectious disease specialist at the University of Michigan.

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"The 121 deaths are a tiny fraction of the more than 190,000 deaths that have been reported in the United States," says Malani. "But for a long time, it was believed that children didn't die from this."

The disproportionate number of deaths among children of color reflects the disparities among adults of color compared to white adults. Research has found that the death toll from COVID-19 is twice as high among people of color under the age of 65 than it is among white people.

Underlying conditions which put adults at higher risk for severe illness and death from COVID-19 are also a risk factor for children. Seventy-five percent of the children who died had an underlying condition which made them more vulnerable to complications from the coronavirus. The most common underlying conditions were asthma, obesity and cardiac issues. Seventy percent of those who died were between the ages of 10 and 20. Only 10 percent were infants under 1 year of age.

While the majority of deaths occurred after the children were admitted to the hospital, 39 children died at home or in the emergency room, which prompts a a lot of questions, Malani says.

"Is it because of health insurance? Or because their parents couldn't get off work?" Malani asks.

The CDC report also points to "disparities in social determinants of health, such as crowded living conditions, food and housing insecurity, wealth and educational gaps, and racial discrimination," as contributing factors in racial health inequities.

The report comes as some schools are returning to in-class instruction, potentially increasing children's risk of exposure and infection.

"What we really need to understand is, why each of these 121 children died," Malani says. "We need to really dig into that and come up with ways to make sure this doesn't happen."

The take-home message, Malani says: "If your child is sick, and you don't think they are doing well, don't wait."

"Make sure your child can be seen by a doctor or taken to the hospital," she says. "If you can't take your child to the hospital yourself, make a plan for somebody else in your social circle that can help you."

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