Alberta kids who are too young for COVID-19 vaccine still at risk, experts say
CBC
Parents of young children are being urged to proceed with caution as many Albertans return to their pre-pandemic routines.
Alberta was one of the first provinces to lift virtually all COVID-19 public health measures, including widespread masking requirements. But there are concerns about how all this could affect children under five who aren't yet eligible for COVID-19 vaccines.
The very young along with the elderly and immunocompromised are vulnerable, experts say, at a time when the virus is still circulating without the protections that have been in place for two years.
"The pandemic has not gone away. Kids are still getting sick. Kids are still getting hospitalized," said Dr. Sam Wong, a pediatrician at the Stollery Children's hospital in Edmonton.
Numbers are down from the peak of the Omicron wave when more children were hospitalized than at any other point in the pandemic. But there are still several dozen kids and teens in hospital with the virus.
As of Thursday, 34 of the 1,067 Albertans hospitalized with COVID-19 were under 18, including seven in the ICU.
With public health measures mostly gone, Wong said parents of children too young to be vaccinated have to sort out what level of risk they're willing to take.
"The majority of kids will be fine. We know that," he said.
"But it's like rolling the dice. And if your number comes up, how do you feel about it when your kid is one who gets sick and ends up in hospital," said Wong, who is also the president of the pediatrics section for the Alberta Medical Association.
At Alberta Children's Hospital in Calgary, infectious disease specialist Dr. Jim Kellner is monitoring the trends as the province moves through the downside of the fifth wave. And he's doing so with a mix of hope and concern.
On one hand, cases and hospitalizations are down, he said.
"We are at a better place than we've been in a long time in the pandemic," said Kellner, who is a member of the federal COVID-19 Immunity Task Force.
But, says Kellner, the virus is still circulating.
"While we're relaxing the restrictions that were in place, it doesn't mean the pandemic is over and it doesn't mean that COVID-19 is gone. And so there's still reason for caution."
Math is not Berry Genge's strongest subject, but she credits her desire to solve problems and her interest in how things work for making her want to study engineering. The fourth-year UPEI student was one of 10 chosen in Canada this spring to become 3M National Student Fellows. The honour, administered by the Society for Teaching and Learning in Higher Education (STLHE), recognizes students who demonstrate leadership qualities both on and off campus.