Health ministry required to issue guidance on COVID-19 treatment protocols for children

Health ministry required to issue guidance on COVID-19 treatment protocols for children hinh anh 1Students from Pham Tu primary school in Hanoi’s Thanh Tri district in class after returning to school. (Photo: VNA)

Hanoi (VNS/VNA) – has asked the
(MoH) to urgently complete and issue guidelines on
treatment protocols for people under 18 years old, especially children under
12.

He asked the ministry to immediately organise training for hospitals across the
country in order to minimise the possibility of SARS-CoV-2 infection in the
paediatric wards or cause an overload of patients.

The ministry was also required to guide localities to have plans for volunteers
to support medical facilities if needed.

The MoH, the Ministry of Information and Communications, agencies and
localities must also strengthen communication to get the cooperation of
families, parents and teachers in ensuring safety for children.

The overall risk of children becoming severely ill or dying from COVID is
extremely low, doctors say.

According to a MoH’s report, the death rate for Vietnamese under 17 who are
infected is about 0.34 percent (about 130 children) of the total number of
COVID-related deaths in Vietnam.

The rate of severe illness after suffering from post-COVID-19 in this group is
also very low, the report said.

However, Prof. Dr. Phan Trong Lan, director of the Department of Preventive
Medicine said children with COVID-19 are also at risk of developing long-term
symptoms.

Even children who’d had mild initial symptoms, or were asymptomatic, were not
spared from these long-lasting effects.

For some, they experienced headache, fatigue, muscle pain, diarrhoea, and joint
pain. Some were suffering physical decline, prolonged coughing, and anxiety – a
pattern seen in adults with long COVID.

Others had been diagnosed with Multisystem Inflammatory Syndrome in Children
(MIS-C).

In some cases, children became worse and required mechanical ventilation,
dialysis, and long-term treatment after being negative for COVID for two or
three weeks later, said Nguyen Trong Nghia, Deputy Director of Dong Nai
Children’s Hospital.

To promptly detect post-COVID symptoms in children, families need to closely
monitor, even 2-3 months later, and go to see the doctor if they have any
serious physical or mental concerns about their kids./.

VNA

Source: VietnamPlus

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