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My name is Nick Coltrain. I grew up on punk rock and Nietzsche. I'm a journalist now.

COVID-19 rate in kids may be higher than known, experts say, and until they can be vaccinated, pandemic may linger

Read on DesMoinesRegister.com.

Originally published April 25, 2021.

Riley Wells was diagnosed with COVID-19 four months ago. Its aftereffects — constant pain, numbness, weariness and muscle spasms — may be with the 15-year-old for years.

The mild bout of COVID-19 unleashed Parsonage-Turner Syndrome on the high school freshman. In the simplest terms, it stops his nerves from communicating with muscles. Doctors warn it could take months for the "pain phase" to end, and years for full recovery, his mother, Jennifer Uile-Wells, said.

"A lot of people don't understand what it's even like, especially how painful it is," Wells said.  "I can go through the day pretending like there's no pain and walking around like there's nothing happening. But it hurts pretty bad to do pretty much everything."

Throughout the more than yearlong pandemic, data on kids and the coronavirus has been murky. While it is clear that children can become sick — and, rarely, become very sick, or worse, from COVID-19 — they generally fare better than adults. Often, they may feel no or minimal symptoms, according to doctors, which carries its own risk as their infections go undiagnosed.

But cases of COVID in kids have shown some spikes and have increased recently, experts said. Current COVID-19 vaccines have been approved only for adults or older teens. Until vaccines are authorized and widely administered to young people, their undiscovered infections may pose a hurdle to breaking through the pandemic, they said.

"We're seeing more cases in children, and this is actually something that we're seeing globally. It's not just Iowa, it's not (just) my county or your county," said Dr. Melanie Wellington, an infectious disease specialist with the University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics. " And there's a lot of debate right now as to the cause."

Comparing viral activity now to earlier in the pandemic isn't possible because of how different the state of the pandemic is in Iowa and the world, Wellington said in an interview. But young people's COVID cases could make the pandemic last longer.

"I do believe that if we don't eventually immunize a large portion of our children, it's going to be extremely difficult to get past this pandemic," said Dr. Joel Waddell, a pediatric infectious disease specialist at Blank Children's Hospital. "Kids make up a large portion of our population, and we need herd immunity."

'The cases that we detect in kids are the tip of the iceberg'

This time last year, tests for coronavirus infections were hard to come by, and "children were an incredibly low priority for testing for good reason," Wellington said. Then, as now, older people and people with underlying health conditions were most at risk for the most severe cases of COVID-19. 

Now, testing is widely available, and everyone 16 or older qualifies for a COVID-19 vaccine, potentially suppressing the ratio of adult-to-child testing. 

As of April 15, Iowans 17 or younger accounted for about 10.7% of all cases in Iowa, or about 41,668 confirmed cases, according to the American Academy of Pediatrics. The increasing proportion of children testing positive became most noticeable in March, Wellington said, but seems to have been tapering off.

Children accounted for about 4% of all positive tests in the past week, or about 127 children out of more than 3,100 new cases, according to the Iowa Department of Public Health. The department's coronavirus website does not provide historic infection rate data broken down by age.

The COVKID Project, which tracks cases in youths nationwide with weekly data collections, shows positive coronavirus tests in Iowa largely lining up with prior surges. That includes a massive surge in November, when the positive cases among Iowa children reached 84.9 cases per 100,000 people aged 0-17 in Iowa, followed by an uneven recovery.

After another spike in January, positive cases largely tapered off until reaching 7.8 cases of youth infections per 100,000 children on March 21. They nearly doubled the following week, and sat at about 10 cases of young people who tested positive per 100,0000 the week of April 16. Nationally, daily case rate has increased from about 13 children per 100,000 in mid-March to 18 per 100,000 in mid April.

Beth Pathak, an epidemiologist who runs the COVKID Project, noted that while Iowa's trajectory among children isn't terrible, it is concerning in neighboring states like Minnesota. 

But testing may not show the whole picture. Since children are more likely to show no symptoms, or symptoms mild enough that they can be mistaken for a minor cold, seasonal allergies or a mild headache, they may not be tested for the virus. 

"The cases that we detect in children are the tip of the iceberg," Pathak said. "We have a huge number of undetected asymptomatic cases in kids. On the one hand, it's not a problem for the individual child because the child is not getting sick. So, fine. But for the community and for controlling the pandemic, it's a big problem, because we know for sure, the evidence is very clear, that people who are infected and asymptomatic, people who never get sick, can still spread the virus to other people."

She added that while many may have minor symptoms, COVID can still devastate some families and should be taken seriously.

Waddell, the Blank hospital pediatric infectious disease specialist and father of two, said he empathizes with parents who grimace watching a nasal swab move uncomfortably far up their child's nose to complete a coronavirus test.

"You can tell adults this is going to hurt, it's going to be uncomfortable, and they'll try to stay still," Waddell said. "But you tell that to your 3-year-old and they'll still kick you in the face. It's not an insignificant thing to have done, but it can protect our communities."

Riley Wells said a few of his friends got sick with COVID-19 before him. Most had mild symptoms, though one he recalled had a bad case. They all bounced back, he said. When he got sick, he remembers mostly lying around in bed, coughing a lot, and being anxious to return to the wrestling mat.

An early symptom of his worsening condition: One of his shoulder blades bulged out like a wing after a post-quarantine wrestling practice.

"(COVID) might not hurt some kids, but there's always kids out there that are going to get hurt by it," Riley Wells said.

Study: Current testing practice may miss 9 out of 10 kids infected with coronavirus

Coronavirus infection rates among students could be six times higher than what’s found with typical testing of people with symptoms, a study by the University of Nebraska Medical Center found. The project involved monitoring wastewater and routine virus testing of students, teachers and staff in the Omaha Public School District who volunteered for the study.

Dr. Jana Broadhurst, the study's author, said the findings likely mirror what’s happening across the nation. The usual process of testing only symptomatic students and those exposed to infectious people may miss as many as nine in 10 cases of students who are infected and showing no or minor symptoms, she said.

“If we don't look for asymptomatic infections, we will always under ascertain our cases, right, and it is seeming that the proportion of asymptomatic cases is higher in children,” Broadhurst said in a Zoom news conference announcing the findings on Tuesday. “So this becomes even more important to do active case finding of asymptomatic infections in school-aged children.” 

Iowa, like almost all of the country, does not routinely test students and school staff for the coronavirus.

Iowa Gov. Kim Reynolds said at a news conference earlier this month that officials are watching for virus activity among young people, but noted children are less likely to have severe cases of the disease. She has emphasized hospitalization rates as a key metric for the state of the pandemic in Iowa.

"We'll continue to monitor it like we normally do," Reynolds said then, adding that the disease's effects on young people aren't as severe as on older people.

The number of people hospitalized with COVID-19 in Iowa have lingered at about 220 for most of April, up from a recent low of 160 people in mid-March. The state reported 235 people hospitalized Thursday, the most in a single day since mid-February. 

Doctor: Kids can and do spread virus; masking is needed

After shutting down much of everyday life last spring, Reynolds became a strong advocate over the summer for returning children to classrooms.

Despite concerns early on, schools have not become hot spots of community transmission, Waddell, the infectious disease specialist, said.

The fact that schools did not become hot spots is likely a mix of children not transmitting the virus as effectively as adults and efforts such as mask wearing, he said. But it's largely a moot point: Layered mitigation is effective, Waddell said. 

Even if kids are not the most effective superspreaders, they can and do spread the virus, Waddell said, particularly among members of their own families. 

"It's exhausting for everyone," Waddell said. "But we've got to keep up the fight to decrease our risk of spread throughout our communities."

Mike Beranek, president of the Iowa Education Association, said it is "imperative for us as a society" to maintain mitigation efforts, including masking in schools. While noting the protections that mitigation efforts and vaccines provide teachers and other adults at Iowa's public schools, he emphasized that science doesn't have answers on the long-term effects of a coronavirus infection. 

"We don't know the unintended consequences for our children 20, 30 years from know," he said.

According to the union, 270 school districts in Iowa, or about 82% of the total, have mask requirements for students and staff. That accounts for about 92% of the enrollment in the state. But some schools have lifted mask requirements or are considering doing so. 

After Beranek was interviewed, state Sen. Amy Sinclair, R-Allerton, introduced an amendment that would allow school principals to waive mask requirements if they felt face covering interfered with students' ability to learn. To gain final approval, the bill must pass the Senate, and the House must also concur with the Senate's amendment. Leadership in the House has not publicly indicated whether it supports the proposal. 

Waddell, meanwhile, encouraged everyone eligible and able to receive a COVID-19 vaccine. Being vaccinated is an act of love, he said, because it protects people nearby as well as the vaccinated. 

Wells and his mother acknowledge his is a rare case, and they're hopeful his pain will ease, and he'll return quickly to being an active teenager.

Uile-Wells hopes, however, that others will do what they can — wear masks, socially distance — to help COVID-19 from hurting other kids. 

"He may be just one kid, but he's my kid," said Uile-Wells, who is also the president of the West Des Moines School Board. "If I can do anything as a mom to prevent other people from getting sick, or injured, or hurt, I would do it in a heartbeat."

Iowa records 6,000 COVID-19 deaths. That pain is 'just the tip of the iceberg.'

Read on DesMoinesRegister.com.

Originally published May 14, 2021.

There's a video Ashlee Birmes treasures.

It shows her mom pulling up to Birmes' home in Le Mars. It shows Birmes' 2-year-old son beside himself with joy — his arms and legs pump giddily as he lets loose a torrent of "Hi, Nana. I love you, Nana. Hi, Nana." As soon as the car door opens, the toddler darts inside to shower more love on his grandma.

"That's how it was every time he would see her," Birmes, 25, said.

Over the past month, she's been trying to ease the little one into a new world, one where his grandmother no longer visits. Staci Ann Birmes, 50, died in her home on April 8 after a months-long bout with the lingering effects of COVID-19.

For Birmes and the friends and families of 6,000 other Iowans, there will be no return to pre-pandemic normal.

Staci Birmes, who also had fibromyalgia, first became sick with the disease in November, during the worst spike Iowa experienced. Ashlee Birmes said the initial bout was like a case of bronchitis. A later scan revealed her lungs to be a mass of scar tissue, Ashlee Birmes said. Her mother would turn blue from lack of oxygen just from walking through the house.

It was only around her grandson that Staci Birmes found the energy to act as if nothing was wrong.

'This pandemic was real': By the numbers

Since Iowa's first casualty of the pandemic on March 24, 2020, an average of 14 Iowans have died daily from the disease. In 13-and-a-half months, COVID-19 killed more Iowans than eight of 2017's top 10 causes of death combined. At the pandemic's peak in Iowa, in November and December, nearly 46 Iowans died daily from it on average.

The state's count of deaths from the illness reached 6,000 midday on  Saturday.

"I hope this is evidence enough to whoever may continue having doubts that this pandemic was real," said Dr. Jorge Salinas, the lead epidemiologist at the University of Iowa Hospital and Clinics. "It has impacted the lives of Americans and the lives of humans on Earth tremendously.

"Six thousand deaths is very tragic, but it's just the tip of the iceberg," he continued. "For every dead person, there are tens of people who have been hospitalized. Tens of thousands of people have been hospitalized, required mechanical ventilation, required so many medical treatments to survive, just in Iowa, in America."

There have been enough positive tests in Iowa — more than 398,000 — for nearly one in every eight Iowans. People sick with COVID have spent a collective 158,975 days in Iowa hospitals, and the health care system was nearly overwhelmed in the fall. (Iowa Department of Public Health reports daily totals of positive tests and people in hospitals, not the total number of individuals who have tested positive or been hospitalized.)

Older people faced the most dire outcomes from COVID-19. People 80 or older accounted for 58% of the deaths. The disease killed 2,335 Iowans who resided in nursing homes, nearly 40% of the total death toll, despite nursing home residents making up less than 1% of the state's total population.

Nursing home residents and staff were also among the first groups of Iowans eligible to receive the vaccine. Outbreaks at nursing homes have since nearly disappeared.

Iowa and the nation are not in the same spot as they were just a handful of months ago, government and health officials say.

'Every day, things get better and better as people get more vaccines'

Iowa Gov. Kim Reynolds, citing vaccination rates and declining viral activity on Wednesday, declared it time for Iowans "to lean further into normal."

"There's no reason for us to continue to fear COVID-19 any longer," Reynolds said. "We know how to manage it, and that individuals can be trusted to make decisions that will keep us on a path forward. I believe that Iowans are ready to live our lives normally again, and I think we've earned it."

About 59% of adult Iowans have received at least one dose of a COVID-19 vaccine, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease and Control. About 39% of the state's total population, including young people who are not eligible for the vaccines, have been fully vaccinated.

Shortly after Reynolds' remarks, federal regulators approved the Pfizer vaccine for people as young as 12. On Thursday, new CDC guidance allowed for fully vaccinated people to not wear face coverings except in limited cases.

"All in all, America and Iowa are in a better position every week, and every day things get better and better as people get more vaccines," Salinas said, adding that he believes it's appropriate to begin relaxing public health measures.

He likened the COVID-19 vaccines to the Eiffel Tower or Great Wall of China on the scale of magnitude and reverence of the achievement. The scientists responsible for them should win the Nobel Prize, Salinas said.

"Everything next to it, no matter how beautiful or important, is dwarfed by the vaccine," Salinas said.

Even so, he expects the true end of the pandemic to be a while in coming. People will still wear masks in his hospital during routine interactions; it's not clear how often people may need additional boosters of the vaccine; and there are enough people who outright refuse the vaccine that he expects occasional, relatively small-scale, outbreaks to continue.

Pandemic thinking will be a condition people will need to get used to living with, he said.

Ashlee Birmes and her family treated the pandemic seriously, she said. They wore masks when out in public. She lined up for a vaccine as quickly as she could.

But she's not acting like the pandemic is over. Her son can't be vaccinated yet, and she — and others in the community, she added — need to step up and protect people who aren't eligible or otherwise can't be vaccinated, she said.

"My son is young, and he may not get it as bad as some adult, but you never know," Birmes, who is also pregnant with her second child, said. "It just scares me. I know I have that extra layer of protection, and I can wear a mask, but to get a 2-year-old to wear a mask and stay close to you is extremely hard."

'Took our last parent that we had'

Salinas likens the pandemic to a war, or life under a dictatorship, in the scale of societal trauma that the virus wrecks. Some of the traumas will be stark, like recovering from job loss or grieving the death of a loved one. Others, such as emotional traumas of a year of abnormal, anxious, isolated life, will have subtle and unexpected ripples, he said.

The lingering effects will also be unequal — just like how the pandemic affected lower income Iowans, people living in communal housing, and people who couldn't work from home the worst.

He called for a retrospective report detailing Iowa's response to the pandemic, with an emphasis on what could be improved upon for future health crises.

"We can try to, in a refractory way, go back to the way things were, but you just can't," Salinas said. "Things are going to have to be different, and we're going to have to acknowledge the pain and magnitude of events like this. If you decide not to do that, it's going to be harder to overcome these situations."

The way Iowa and the nation recover from the pandemic will be the result of policy and political choices, Salinas said.

Pandemics don't operate in vacuums, siloed away from the rest of life. They interrupt, and build on and compound struggles faced by institutions, social systems and people.

For Ashlee Birmes, the pandemic did not just cost her a parent. She lost her father six years prior; in effect, COVID sheared an entire generation from her family.

"It is sad that this pandemic took the last parent I had living. The last living grandparent on my side my children would have gotten to know and enjoy," she said in a text message.

"Now," she said in an interview, "it's just done."