Hong Kong Med J 2021 Jun;27(3):175–6 | Epub 7 Jun 2021
© Hong Kong Academy of Medicine. CC BY-NC-ND 4.0
EDITORIAL
Impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic on the
physical and mental health of children
Winnie WY Tse, FHKAM (Paediatrics)1; Mike YW Kwan, FHKAM (Paediatrics)2
1 President, Hong Kong College of Paediatricians, Hong Kong
2 Consultant, Paediatric Infectious Diseases Unit, Department of Paediatrics and Adolescent Medicine, Hospital Authority Infectious Diseases Centre, Princess Margaret Hospital, Hong Kong
Corresponding author: Dr Winnie WY Tse (president@paediatrician.org.hk)
The total number of new cases of coronavirus
disease 2019 (COVID-19) is decreasing in Hong
Kong, but two recent paediatric cases have attracted
immense public attention—a 4-month-old baby
who contracted the viral infection from his family
and a 4-year-old boy who was likely infected in
the community several months before, possibly
concurrently with roseola infantum, and tested
positive despite the long interval between infection
and testing.
Since the outbreak of COVID-19 in Hong
Kong in January 2020, there has been a great deal
of research by local paediatricians on the clinical
manifestations1 2 3 and scientific findings4 5 of the
paediatric cases, including comparative studies with
paediatric cases in South Korea,6 Wuhan,6 7 8 and other regions of mainland China,6 7 8 and with those
of children infected with severe acute respiratory
syndrome in 2003.9 Collaborations with local and
overseas researchers have also contributed to a
deeper understanding of COVID-19.10 11 12 13
The overt effects of COVID-19 on children
are known: severe acute respiratory syndrome
coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) infection generally
causes mild illness in children and adolescents,
with 99.2% of paediatric patients with COVID-19
experiencing mild symptoms8 and 26% to 38%
asymptomatic.3 8 However, serious complications
have occurred in children in Hong Kong, such as
PIMS-TS (paediatric inflammatory multisystem
syndrome temporally associated with SARS-CoV-2),
post-COVID-19 autoimmune haemolytic anaemia,
and COVID toes.8 These patients required lengthy
hospital management including intensive care and
prolonged follow-up after recovery.
In order to protect vulnerable individuals
in Hong Kong, such as children and older and/or
chronically ill adults, social distancing measures to
mitigate the spread of infection have been enforced.
Intermittently, schools have been closed and were
fully open for <3 months in the entire year of 2020,
and school closures have continued into 2021.
Schools are fundamental to child and adolescent
development and wellbeing, providing academic
instruction, social and emotional skills, safety, reliable nutrition, physical/speech and mental health
therapy, and opportunities for physical activity,
among other benefits. Schools also play a critical role
in addressing racial and social inequity.14 In the past
15 months of school suspensions, online teaching
has played a central role in ensuring academic
provisions but other aspects of development and
wellbeing have been compromised.
In addition to providing a learning
environment, schools serve to satisfy students’ non-academic
needs and school closures have serious
consequences on the physical and mental wellbeing
of students.15 Internationally, studies have found that
obesity16 and myopia17 among school-age children
have increased because of longer screen times, lack of
physical activities, and the small living and learning
spaces at home. These indirect consequences can
affect all children, but some are disproportionately
more likely to be affected, such as those with special
educational needs or those who are financially
deprived. Tso et al18 conducted a large-scale cross-sectional
population online survey of 29 202 Hong
Kong families with children aged 2 to 12 years. The
authors found that, amid the COVID-19 outbreak
and the resulting related school closures and disease
containment measures in Hong Kong, the risk of
child psychosocial problems was higher in children
with special educational needs, and/or acute or
chronic disease, mothers with mental illness, single-parent
families, and low-income families. Delayed
bedtime, inadequate sleep, inadequate exercise, and
extended use of electronic devices were associated
with significantly higher levels of stress among
parents and more psychosocial problems among
pre-school children. These indirect impacts of
COVID-19 could potentially create a social crisis
because school closures are likely to widen the
learning gap between children from lower-income
and those from higher-income families.19
In Hong Kong, Chua et al3 found that household
transmission was the main source of infection for
children and youths, and the risk of being infected at
school was small. On 10 May 2021, the Hong Kong
College of Paediatricians, The Hong Kong Paediatric
Society, and the Hong Kong Society for Paediatric Immunology, Allergy and Infectious Diseases jointly
issued an appeal to adult household members and
carers (aged ≥16 years) to receive the COVID-19
vaccine for the benefit of the younger generation.20
However, this is only the first step in the appeal from paediatricians. The ultimate goal is to boost the
overall immunisation rate in the community and to
restore societal normalcy. On 24 May 2021, whole-school
half-day face-to-face classes resumed for all
school grades in Hong Kong. However, students
were still not permitted to interact with peers at
lunch, enjoy many of the non-core subjects that
have to be missed due to shortened class time, nor
socialise outside of “class bubbles”.
The United States, Canada, Singapore, and
Israel have approved COVID-19 vaccination
for those aged 12 to 15 years. This is a welcome
development in the efforts to protect the population
from COVID-19, and we look forward to newer
scientific evidence for vaccine safety and efficacy in
even younger children.
The take-home message remains: community-wide immunisation is safe and effective—and
much more desirable than closures of educational
and leisure facilities—for protecting the physical
health and long-term psychosocial and emotional
development of children, and for reducing social
inequity.
Author contributions
All authors contributed to the editorial, approved the final version for publication, and take responsibility for its accuracy and integrity.
Conflicts of interest
All authors have disclosed no conflicts of interest.
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