As the number of new Covid-19 cases surges across the US, doctors are sounding the alarm about the record-breaking pediatric hospitalizations being fueled by the highly transmissible Omicron and Delta variants.
Doctors are warning that while the Omicron variant seems to attach to the upper airways, treatment for children isn’t the same as adults.
“We cannot treat the airways of children like they are the airways of adults,” Bracho-Sanchez said. “It’s just not the way it works. And for us pediatricians, we know that respiratory viruses can lead to …. coup and bronchiolitis, that inflammation of the upper airways that does get children into trouble.”
To combat the hospitalization rates, experts are calling to get eligible children vaccinated. On Monday (January 3), the FDA approved the Pfizer booster for children aged 12 to 15. The FDA also shortened the booster eligibility period from six months from the second shot to five months for everyone 12 years and over.
So far, the CDC has reported that five million kids 12-15 have received the vaccine and are now eligible for the booster.