A nonprofit publication of the Kentucky Center for Public Service Journalism

Scottie Day: COVID-19 and children, what to look out for now that in-person classes have resumed


As flu season comes around and our children are going back to school, there are many concerns on how to monitor your child’s health. Not only can a common cold mimic the symptoms of COVID-19, but allergies and the flu can both have similarities as well. With school being in-person, it is crucial that we take all the necessary precautions to keep our kids safe and healthy.

At the Children’s Hospital, there has been an influx of severe or critical cases of COVID-19, meaning some require oxygen or ventilator support. Since July 30, there have been five times as many admissions for severe and critical infections of COVID-19 than there was the entirety of the pandemic up until that point. Most of these children are 12 years old or older, and not a single child that has been admitted has been immunized for COVID-19. Because the delta variant is much more infectious, more people are being infected, including young children.

(Photo by Drazen Zigic, iStock/Getty Images Plus, via UK Healthcare)

Because schools have gone back in person this year, there are many safety precautions that students and staff should follow to minimize the possibility of infection. Health screenings are recommended in school systems, as well as making sure parents understand not to send children to school if they are feeling sick. Because COVID-19 shares symptoms with the common cold, flu and allergies, there is no way to be sure that your child does not have COVID-19 other than getting your child tested. If your child tests negative but is still feeling sick, it is important to continue to keep them at home so they do not infect other students or staff with whatever illness they might have.

The most effective thing you can do to protect yourself and others is to get vaccinated. Making sure that masks are properly worn in public settings is extremely beneficial in reducing the risk of contracting or spreading COVID-19. Many are worried that masks are not safe for children to wear for long periods of time, but there is absolutely no truth behind the idea.

Many question whether virtual learning is safer for children than allowing them to return to school. If we continue health screenings and get our children tested if they are feeling sick, we should be able to provide a safe and stable environment for our children’s learning experience.

To encourage the safe meeting of in-person classes, it is important that more children from the ages of 12-17 get vaccinated. Currently, only 47% of children in this age group are fully vaccinated. If we continue doing health screenings and increase the vaccination percentage in our total population, we can begin to get back to our normal routine.

Scottie Day, M.D., is physician-in-chief at Kentucky Children’s Hospital


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3 Comments

  1. Roy Lewis says:

    I believe that it is necessary to introduce non-vaccination for visiting educational institutions, including vaccination of all staff and all schoolchildren. Only in this case it will be possible to avoid large losses and continue training offline, and not online.

  2. Caden Lopez says:

    I am of the opinion that vaccination is necessary. The Delta strain is too dangerous and contagious.

  3. Al Graeme says:

    It is certainly worth having the vaccine as nobody wants to get Covid.

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