Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The point that PP's were making wasn't about covid being mistaken for RSV for vice versa. It's that RSV is happening at the same time as covid pediatric hospitalizations so RSV is taking up some pediatric beds, so there are fewer that could go to covid patients, so that narrative that the "pediatric beds are full!" is partially driven by RSV
This ^^
Exactly. It’s not that people think the covid is rsv or vice versa, it’s that it’s both. So, news stories that read “covid on the rise, pediatric icu full” aren’t giving the whole story.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Very sad article! Makes me rethink full time in person school. We need to get creative to keep kids distanced. School districts should be upgrading filtration and providing medical grade masks too.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/outlook/2021/08/04/pediatrician-covid-children-delta/?itid=hp_opinions
At least the doctor who wrote it alludes to her cognitive biases around thinking COVID causes severe illness in children. It does, for a small percentage, and that's tragic in those cases. Of course it is. But we really, really need to avoid relying on these kinds of anecdotes to drive policy.
These are not anecdotes.
an·ec·dote
/ˈanəkˌdōt/
noun
noun: anecdote; plural noun: anecdotes
a short amusing or interesting story about a real incident or person.
"told anecdotes about his job"
Similar:
story
tale
narrative
sketch
urban myth
urban legend
reminiscence
yarn
shaggy-dog story
-an account regarded as unreliable or hearsay.
"his wife's death has long been the subject of rumor and anecdote"
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The point that PP's were making wasn't about covid being mistaken for RSV for vice versa. It's that RSV is happening at the same time as covid pediatric hospitalizations so RSV is taking up some pediatric beds, so there are fewer that could go to covid patients, so that narrative that the "pediatric beds are full!" is partially driven by RSV
This ^^
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Hospitalization numbers look worse for COVID-19. But those numbers are inflated as a result of the CDC's reporting rules. The CDC requires every child admitted to a hospital to be tested for the coronavirus.
Dr. Roshni Mathew, a pediatric infectious disease specialist at the Stanford University School of Medicine, says experience at her hospital found that 45% of the time, a child who tested positive for the coronavirus was not actually sick with COVID-19. The findings have been published online in the journal Hospital Pediatrics.
In those cases, hospitalization was due to "a completely unrelated diagnosis, like appendicitis or femur fracture or something else," she says.
https://www.npr.org/sections/health-shots/2021/05/25/997467734/childrens-risk-of-serious-illness-from-covid-19-is-as-low-as-it-is-for-the-flu
So, in fact, any child admitted to a hospital is tested for covid regardless of clinical symptoms. If the child is positive, they are then labeled as a covid-associated admission. #misinformation
Citation for that? What would make you think the CDC controlled individual hospital policy (public and private entities) to the point they could "require" this?
DP. I don't know that the CDC is requiring it, but the AAP link I posted talks about universal COVID testing at hospitals. Every admitted patient is getting a COVID test, that goes on the diagnosis submitted to insurance, and it is actually that number being used to estimate our COVID cases in most places (there are a few exceptions).
https://hosppeds.aappublications.org/content/hosppeds/early/2021/05/18/hpeds.2021-006084.full.pdf
News article here: https://nymag.com/intelligencer/2021/05/study-number-of-kids-hospitalized-for-covid-is-overcounted.html
Anonymous wrote:The point that PP's were making wasn't about covid being mistaken for RSV for vice versa. It's that RSV is happening at the same time as covid pediatric hospitalizations so RSV is taking up some pediatric beds, so there are fewer that could go to covid patients, so that narrative that the "pediatric beds are full!" is partially driven by RSV
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Hospitalization numbers look worse for COVID-19. But those numbers are inflated as a result of the CDC's reporting rules. The CDC requires every child admitted to a hospital to be tested for the coronavirus.
Dr. Roshni Mathew, a pediatric infectious disease specialist at the Stanford University School of Medicine, says experience at her hospital found that 45% of the time, a child who tested positive for the coronavirus was not actually sick with COVID-19. The findings have been published online in the journal Hospital Pediatrics.
In those cases, hospitalization was due to "a completely unrelated diagnosis, like appendicitis or femur fracture or something else," she says.
https://www.npr.org/sections/health-shots/2021/05/25/997467734/childrens-risk-of-serious-illness-from-covid-19-is-as-low-as-it-is-for-the-flu
So, in fact, any child admitted to a hospital is tested for covid regardless of clinical symptoms. If the child is positive, they are then labeled as a covid-associated admission. #misinformation
Citation for that? What would make you think the CDC controlled individual hospital policy (public and private entities) to the point they could "require" this?
DP. I don't know that the CDC is requiring it, but the AAP link I posted talks about universal COVID testing at hospitals. Every admitted patient is getting a COVID test, that goes on the diagnosis submitted to insurance, and it is actually that number being used to estimate our COVID cases in most places (there are a few exceptions).
https://hosppeds.aappublications.org/content/hosppeds/early/2021/05/18/hpeds.2021-006084.full.pdf
News article here: https://nymag.com/intelligencer/2021/05/study-number-of-kids-hospitalized-for-covid-is-overcounted.html
So is the contention that the pediatric increase in hospital use unrelated to the spike in general COVID cases?
That is correct. It is in large part driven by RSV, which is on the rise because children's immune systems were not exposed to the virus for over 18 months, causing a surge in cases now that immune systems are not trained to fight it off.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Hospitalization numbers look worse for COVID-19. But those numbers are inflated as a result of the CDC's reporting rules. The CDC requires every child admitted to a hospital to be tested for the coronavirus.
Dr. Roshni Mathew, a pediatric infectious disease specialist at the Stanford University School of Medicine, says experience at her hospital found that 45% of the time, a child who tested positive for the coronavirus was not actually sick with COVID-19. The findings have been published online in the journal Hospital Pediatrics.
In those cases, hospitalization was due to "a completely unrelated diagnosis, like appendicitis or femur fracture or something else," she says.
https://www.npr.org/sections/health-shots/2021/05/25/997467734/childrens-risk-of-serious-illness-from-covid-19-is-as-low-as-it-is-for-the-flu
So, in fact, any child admitted to a hospital is tested for covid regardless of clinical symptoms. If the child is positive, they are then labeled as a covid-associated admission. #misinformation
Citation for that? What would make you think the CDC controlled individual hospital policy (public and private entities) to the point they could "require" this?
DP. I don't know that the CDC is requiring it, but the AAP link I posted talks about universal COVID testing at hospitals. Every admitted patient is getting a COVID test, that goes on the diagnosis submitted to insurance, and it is actually that number being used to estimate our COVID cases in most places (there are a few exceptions).
https://hosppeds.aappublications.org/content/hosppeds/early/2021/05/18/hpeds.2021-006084.full.pdf
News article here: https://nymag.com/intelligencer/2021/05/study-number-of-kids-hospitalized-for-covid-is-overcounted.html
So is the contention that the pediatric increase in hospital use unrelated to the spike in general COVID cases?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Hospitalization numbers look worse for COVID-19. But those numbers are inflated as a result of the CDC's reporting rules. The CDC requires every child admitted to a hospital to be tested for the coronavirus.
Dr. Roshni Mathew, a pediatric infectious disease specialist at the Stanford University School of Medicine, says experience at her hospital found that 45% of the time, a child who tested positive for the coronavirus was not actually sick with COVID-19. The findings have been published online in the journal Hospital Pediatrics.
In those cases, hospitalization was due to "a completely unrelated diagnosis, like appendicitis or femur fracture or something else," she says.
https://www.npr.org/sections/health-shots/2021/05/25/997467734/childrens-risk-of-serious-illness-from-covid-19-is-as-low-as-it-is-for-the-flu
So, in fact, any child admitted to a hospital is tested for covid regardless of clinical symptoms. If the child is positive, they are then labeled as a covid-associated admission. #misinformation
Citation for that? What would make you think the CDC controlled individual hospital policy (public and private entities) to the point they could "require" this?
DP. I don't know that the CDC is requiring it, but the AAP link I posted talks about universal COVID testing at hospitals. Every admitted patient is getting a COVID test, that goes on the diagnosis submitted to insurance, and it is actually that number being used to estimate our COVID cases in most places (there are a few exceptions).
https://hosppeds.aappublications.org/content/hosppeds/early/2021/05/18/hpeds.2021-006084.full.pdf
News article here: https://nymag.com/intelligencer/2021/05/study-number-of-kids-hospitalized-for-covid-is-overcounted.html
So is the contention that the pediatric increase in hospital use unrelated to the spike in general COVID cases?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Very sad article! Makes me rethink full time in person school. We need to get creative to keep kids distanced. School districts should be upgrading filtration and providing medical grade masks too.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/outlook/2021/08/04/pediatrician-covid-children-delta/?itid=hp_opinions
At least the doctor who wrote it alludes to her cognitive biases around thinking COVID causes severe illness in children. It does, for a small percentage, and that's tragic in those cases. Of course it is. But we really, really need to avoid relying on these kinds of anecdotes to drive policy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Hospitalization numbers look worse for COVID-19. But those numbers are inflated as a result of the CDC's reporting rules. The CDC requires every child admitted to a hospital to be tested for the coronavirus.
Dr. Roshni Mathew, a pediatric infectious disease specialist at the Stanford University School of Medicine, says experience at her hospital found that 45% of the time, a child who tested positive for the coronavirus was not actually sick with COVID-19. The findings have been published online in the journal Hospital Pediatrics.
In those cases, hospitalization was due to "a completely unrelated diagnosis, like appendicitis or femur fracture or something else," she says.
https://www.npr.org/sections/health-shots/2021/05/25/997467734/childrens-risk-of-serious-illness-from-covid-19-is-as-low-as-it-is-for-the-flu
So, in fact, any child admitted to a hospital is tested for covid regardless of clinical symptoms. If the child is positive, they are then labeled as a covid-associated admission. #misinformation
Citation for that? What would make you think the CDC controlled individual hospital policy (public and private entities) to the point they could "require" this?
DP. I don't know that the CDC is requiring it, but the AAP link I posted talks about universal COVID testing at hospitals. Every admitted patient is getting a COVID test, that goes on the diagnosis submitted to insurance, and it is actually that number being used to estimate our COVID cases in most places (there are a few exceptions).
https://hosppeds.aappublications.org/content/hosppeds/early/2021/05/18/hpeds.2021-006084.full.pdf
News article here: https://nymag.com/intelligencer/2021/05/study-number-of-kids-hospitalized-for-covid-is-overcounted.html
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Hospitalization numbers look worse for COVID-19. But those numbers are inflated as a result of the CDC's reporting rules. The CDC requires every child admitted to a hospital to be tested for the coronavirus.
Dr. Roshni Mathew, a pediatric infectious disease specialist at the Stanford University School of Medicine, says experience at her hospital found that 45% of the time, a child who tested positive for the coronavirus was not actually sick with COVID-19. The findings have been published online in the journal Hospital Pediatrics.
In those cases, hospitalization was due to "a completely unrelated diagnosis, like appendicitis or femur fracture or something else," she says.
https://www.npr.org/sections/health-shots/2021/05/25/997467734/childrens-risk-of-serious-illness-from-covid-19-is-as-low-as-it-is-for-the-flu
So, in fact, any child admitted to a hospital is tested for covid regardless of clinical symptoms. If the child is positive, they are then labeled as a covid-associated admission. #misinformation
Citation for that? What would make you think the CDC controlled individual hospital policy (public and private entities) to the point they could "require" this?
Anonymous wrote:
Hospitalization numbers look worse for COVID-19. But those numbers are inflated as a result of the CDC's reporting rules. The CDC requires every child admitted to a hospital to be tested for the coronavirus.
Dr. Roshni Mathew, a pediatric infectious disease specialist at the Stanford University School of Medicine, says experience at her hospital found that 45% of the time, a child who tested positive for the coronavirus was not actually sick with COVID-19. The findings have been published online in the journal Hospital Pediatrics.
In those cases, hospitalization was due to "a completely unrelated diagnosis, like appendicitis or femur fracture or something else," she says.
https://www.npr.org/sections/health-shots/2021/05/25/997467734/childrens-risk-of-serious-illness-from-covid-19-is-as-low-as-it-is-for-the-flu
So, in fact, any child admitted to a hospital is tested for covid regardless of clinical symptoms. If the child is positive, they are then labeled as a covid-associated admission. #misinformation