Yeah, that democrat DeSantis and his shutdowns! Meanwhile, GOP governor Newsom was all about freedom! I get that you're trolling, but you're really bad at this.
Covid-19 Complication Among Children Fades in Latest Wave of Virus A serious inflammatory complication that strikes some children in the weeks following a Covid-19 infection has almost disappeared. I'll bet it did!
They were doing this the first week of the shutdowns in 2020...ignoring who was President at the time and behaving as if the Democrats controlled both the House and the Senate at the time. In contrast, Biden stated in his presidential campaign that we will not do another shutdown. So far, that has been true. After Biden won the U.S. Presidential election...they then blamed Biden for the economic / scholastic shutdowns in 2020 even though he was inaugurated until late January 2021 while the Trump's were secretly being vaccinated. #stopwhitewashing wrbtrader
Fortunately there is a safe and effective way to protect your children from Covid -- vaccination. Local health stats show unvaxxed kids less likely to have COVID than vaccinated youth https://mynorthwest.com/3569040/dor...s-likely-to-have-covid-than-vaccinated-youth/
A study is getting underway to understand the long term health impact of Covid in children. VCU seeking participants for study of long-term effects of COVID-19 in children https://www.henricocitizen.com/arti...of-long-term-effects-of-covid-19-in-children/ A team of researchers and clinicians at the Virginia Commonwealth University School of Nursing is leading a multi-institutional project aimed at studying the long-term health effects of COVID-19 in infants, children, adolescents and young adults. In the planning stages since September 2021, researchers are now enrolling participants. The goal is to better understand the prevalence and impact of long-lasting COVID-19 symptoms (“long COVID”) in children and young adults to develop effective treatments in the future. The project is part of the Researching COVID to Enhance Recovery (RECOVER) initiative, a nationwide study funded by the National Institutes of Health. Much of what is known about long COVID-19 is based on studies in adults, but less understood are the effects in children and adolescents. Data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimates that, as of February 2022, about 75% of children and adolescents in the United States have had COVID-19. “The RECOVER project is going to help us understand long COVID so we might develop treatments for those affected by the pandemic for years to come, but it’s also going to give back to the families deciding to participate in the study by understanding important information about their children’s development, health and mental well-being,” said Amy Salisbury, professor and associate dean for research, scholarship and innovation at VCU School of Nursing, who serves as one of the principal investigators of enrollment sites for the RECOVER initiative. “This is an opportunity to help us find answers on how COVID-19 is impacting families over time and what we can do to minimize these effects.” The VCU School of Nursing is leading the efforts of a research consortium composed of VCU, Rhode Island Hospital and NYU Langone Health, but the RECOVER project is enrolling people across the nation. (More at above url)
Yep it is.... the questions are why the results of King County Department of Health over a small period of time show these results. Or is this another example of cherry-picking a time period (past 30 days) and location which is not reflective of the broader population and longer time frames. It also should be noted that there is no discussion of health outcomes for vaccinated versus unvaccinated children -- at this point Covid vaccines are still effective at preventing severe illness but not at preventing infection (with only 12% effectiveness with BA.5).
I'm saying it contradicts your statement "a safe way to protect your childre is vax" meanwhile posting an article that basically says the opposite (past natural immunity protecting against current contraction).