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Daily Mirror
Daily Mirror
National
Ben Mitchell & Lorraine King

Parents 'afraid to take sick children to hospital in case they get coronavirus'

Parents with seriously-ill children are failing to bring them to hospital out of fear their youngsters will contract coronavirus, a top medic is claiming.

Dr Sanjay Patel, a consultant in paediatric infectious diseases at Southampton Children's Hospital, said fewer children with conditions such as appendicitis, dehydration and sepsis were being brought to its emergency department.

He said that some mums and dads were assuming that all illnesses were being caused by Covid-19 or were not seeking healthcare due to fears over contracting the virus.

He has now helped develop national guidance on children's health to enable parents to assess when they should be seeking help.

It consists of a red, amber and green traffic light system advising parents of which symptoms require them to seek urgent medical advice and the options available to them.

Parents are claimed to be too scared to take their seriously ill children to hospital (stock image) (Getty Images)

Dr Patel said: "These are extremely challenging and worrying times for families and I can't stress how important it is to follow the Government advice about social distancing in order to slow down the speed of Covid-19.

"However, I'm really worried there is a very real risk that some children with illnesses such as appendicitis, dehydration or even sepsis are not being brought to see healthcare professionals as quickly as they would be normally.

"We are seeing fewer children than we would expect to see at this time of year, particularly through our emergency department, and those we are seeing who do not have Covid-19 are more severely unwell.

"We've seen evidence of this in Hampshire as well as across the country."

Dr Sanjay Patel is a consultant in paediatric infectious diseases at Southampton Children's Hospital (Southampton Children's Hospital)

He continued: "We know that the message about Covid-19 is so powerful and parents are putting most children's illnesses down to this.

"The other issue is that they are just too scared to bring their child to see a healthcare professional because they are worried that they might pick up Covid-19.

"Therefore, it is really important for parents to recognise that Covid-19 is not causing severe infection and illness in most children."

He added: "If your child is unwell don't assume they have Covid-19, please take a look at the resources we've developed and if your child has any of the red or amber features seek help urgently."

The guidance, produced in conjunction with the Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health, can be found here.

It advices parents or carers to rush their child to hospital of they display any of the following symptoms:

• Becomes pale, mottled and feels abnormally cold to the touch

• Has pauses in their breathing (apnoeas), has an irregular breathing pattern or starts grunting

• Severe difficulty in breathing becoming agitated or unresponsive

• Is going blue round the lips

• Has a fit/seizure

• Becomes extremely distressed (crying inconsolably despite distraction), confused, very lethargic (difficult to wake) or unresponsive

• Develops a rash that does not disappear with pressure (the ‘Glass test’)

• Has testicular pain, especially in teenage boys

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