According to a recently published report from the CDC, Black, Latino and Native American children are dying at a disproportionately higher rate than their white counterparts from COVID-19.
The study, published on September 18, documented 391,814 known cases and 121 deaths among people under the age of 21 in five months ranging from February to July.
With the academic school year well underway, the CDC’s report is rather alarming.
Although combined, the three groups represent 41% of the population in this nation, over 75% of the children who have died from complications of COVID-19 have been Black, Hispanic and American Indian kids. The data is on par with a CDC report published in July on the inordinate coronavirus mortality rate among Black and Hispanic adults. Both studies collected data from various local health departments.
This Black Woman Entrepreneur Uses Tech To Source Talent From Africa For Job Opportunities
The virus is also killing those groups due to lack of proper diagnoses and the varying ways the virus can present itself within individuals. Hispanic children lead the number of deaths with an astounding 45%, 29% for Black children and 4% for kids of American Indian descent.
The new CDC report also reiterated that the deadliness of coronavirus increases with age. Only 10% of child deaths occurred in infants age one or younger.
Monika Goyal, a pediatric emergency medicine specialist, published an unrelated report in the American Academy Journal of Pediatrics that expounded on the findings.
“Children tested for SARS-CoV-2 through a community-based testing site, racial/ethnic minorities and socioeconomically disadvantaged children carry the highest burden of infection,” Goyal wrote. “Understanding and addressing the causes of these differences are needed to mitigate disparities and limit the spread of infection.”
Source: Children Of Color Constitute The Majority Of COVID-19 Deaths Among Kids
Recent Comments