Missouri Children's Hospital Hits Capacity, Other ICUs Report Kids With COVID

The Children's Mercy Hospital in Kansas City hit capacity on Monday, and other facilities in Missouri are reporting children so sick from COVID-19 that they're in intensive care units.

Dr. Barbara Pahud, director of research for infectious diseases at the children's hospital, urged parents to take precautionary measures as the school year starts, including vaccinations for children 12 and older.

"If we open schools up without social distancing, without vaccination, without masks, we are going to see problems. We are going to see children land in the hospital and that's the last thing we want to do," Pahud said during a Monday briefing.

The St. Louis Metropolitan Pandemic Task Force reported 31 patients age 18 or younger are hospitalized from the virus, the most since the pandemic started, with 10 children in ICUs, the Associated Press reported.

For more reporting from the Associated Press, see below.

Missouri Vaccine Clinic
An increased number of children have been hospitalized with COVID-19, and doctors worry the starting school year will make matters worse. A COVID vaccine clinic stands open in a school on Aug. 5, 2021 in Springfield, Mo. Spencer Platt/Getty Images

Children are making up an increasing number of patients filling Missouri hospitals during the summer COVID-19 surge, and some doctors worry that the return to school will lead to more illnesses.

The fast-spreading Delta variant combined with low vaccination rates across Missouri to create a new wave of the COVID-19 outbreak that began in June and still persists. One difference this time: Children are more prone to get sick.

Hospital leaders in Springfield are also worried about the ramifications of thousands of unmasked students gathering in schools — only a handful of southwestern Missouri districts require masks. Leaders of both hospitals in Missouri's third-largest city are bracing for the worst.

"My fear is that we will see an increase in cases in the next one to two weeks and we are preparing as a hospital facility at Mercy and CoxHealth for that surge," said Dr. Kayce Morton, a pediatrician at CoxHealth.

Missouri continues to lag well behind the national average in vaccinations. Information from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention shows that while 52.6 percent of all Americans are fully vaccinated, just 45.3 percent of Missourians have completed their shots.

The Missouri Foundation for Health and pediatricians from throughout the state recently launched an informational campaign that seeks to increase adult vaccinations to help protect children from COVID-19. The concept is simple: Fewer sick adults means fewer opportunities for kids to catch it.

"Vaccination is our best tool to decrease COVID and get it out of here and keep our kids safe," Morton said.

Missouri reported 2,245 newly confirmed cases on Thursday and 10 new deaths. Since the onset of the pandemic, Missouri has confirmed 634,296 cases and 10,632 deaths.