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Long COVID in Children: What the Science Shows and How to Protect Them

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  • Long COVID
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    Authors: Yaneer Bar-Yam, Stephane Bilodeau, Špela Šalamon, Greta Fox, Sunil K Raina, Andrew Ewing

    Long COVID in Children: Science, Precautions, and Protection

    For years, many parents, doctors, and policymakers were told that children are safe from COVID-19. That belief shaped decisions about schools, masking, and vaccination—and continues to influence public attitudes today. Yet growing scientific evidence makes it clear that this notion is incorrect.

    New research is changing what we know. Over the past two years, pediatric studies from the U.S., U.K., and Europe have documented that children and teenagers can experience long-term effects after infection—that can be serious and lasting [1-9]. These findings challenge earlier expectations and call for a rethinking of how we protect children’s health.

    What the science shows

    Long COVID is a thoroughly and widely documented reality in children and teenagers. Pediatric studies show that 10–15% of children experience long COVID symptoms after infection [2,5], and that multiple infections [3] significantly increase the risk of more severe symptoms (as discussed later).

    These symptoms can include fatigue, trouble concentrating, headaches, dizziness, chest pain, and shortness of breath that last for weeks, months, or even years after the initial infection. Children’s lives may be disrupted in ways that affect school attendance and performance, participation in sports, and social development.

    Recent pediatric studies reveal that, similar to adults, long COVID in children is often a multi-system condition—affecting brain function, sleep, autonomic regulation, respiratory health, and the gastrointestinal system, as well as specific conditions such as new-onset diabetes [9]. Symptoms often appear in clusters that help doctors identify cases and guide care.

    Younger children frequently present with cognitive, behavioral, or sleep-related changes rather than clear physical complaints—making these symptoms less visible and harder for adults to recognize or for children to describe—and therefore more easily missed. This explains why the true burden of long COVID in younger children has been underestimated.

    Children recovering from acute-phase COVID-19 show measurable reductions in brain volume and disrupted network connectivity, particularly in the cingulate cortex, hippocampus, and superior temporal regions. Some of these changes partially resolve over time, but others persist, indicating ongoing impairment in cognitive and emotional domains caused by structural, infection-induced damage to the developing brain [6].

    Although neurological risks appear less broad in children, some, like cognitive impairment, seizures, and rare psychiatric disorders, can persist for a long time and we do not know yet if they fully resolve [1, Supplement S9]. This is consistent with family reports of “brain fog” and academic struggles over long periods of time. 

    Children have limited autonomy to control their environment or daily routines—they may not be able to modify school schedules, rest when fatigued, or reduce cognitive demands—which can make the educational and developmental consequences of illness more severe.

    Reinfections

    Scientific evidence shows that reinfections double the likelihood of Long COVID and markedly increase related complications, including fatigue, cognitive difficulties, headaches, dysautonomia/POTS, and heart rhythm abnormalities [1,3]. Each additional infection adds cumulative harm—documented in children [4], adolescents [6], and adults [7]. Reducing the number of infections and reinfections is critical to protecting long-term health. Precautions and prevention measures in schools and in family households are essential to avoid these cumulative effects.

    Long-Term Public Health Implications

    Even if only a small proportion of children experience prolonged symptoms, the impact could be enormous—lost schooling, reduced physical fitness, and increased mental health challenges. Over time, these effects could accumulate, influencing population-level educational outcomes and workforce readiness. Most importantly, the ongoing health consequences of COVID-19 may shape the biological and social development of an entire generation.

    Mitigation measures: layered protection for children

    Because no proven curative treatments for Long COVID currently exist, reducing infections and reinfections remains the most effective way to protect children.

    Schools and families can reduce risk by using multiple proactive measures—in various combinations—including:

    • Vaccination for children provides strong protection against acute severe disease in children and adolescents, but only transient, limited protection against infection itself [8]. Recent large pediatric studies also show substantial protection against long COVID, with risk reductions of 30–70% depending on age, and protection lasting 6 months to a year after vaccination [10-12].
    • High-quality respirators (such as N95, FFP2, or KN95) in schools and shared indoor spaces reduce airborne exposure.
    • Improved ventilation and air filtration—using HEPA filters in classrooms and shared spaces, including lunch rooms, and, where feasible, by upgrading building ventilation and/or opening windows—significantly lowers transmission.
    • Avoiding policies that pressure sick children to return too early, which can worsen illness and spread infection to others. This is common sense with all infectious illnesses.
    • Safe social connection through outdoor play, virtual hangouts and group activities helps maintain peer interaction.
    • Digital options for education—including or combining online classes and recorded lessons—provides safe ongoing education as well as continuity for children who are isolating or recovering, while keeping learning inclusive and adaptable.

    Remote Learning

    Remote education is one of the well-established approaches for reducing airborne transmission. Although often associated with short-term emergencies, many public school systems offer remote learning as a standard option. Because remote-learning options are less familiar than other mitigation measures and vary across regions, we briefly outline their current availability and use. 

    Key practices for successful remote learning include:

    • A single, consistent platform for assignments and communication 
    • Technology support (loaner laptops, headsets, and internet hotspots)
    • Ongoing social connection through virtual clubs or safe outdoor meetups

    Many U.S. states operate established remote-learning public schools [13–26]—including large states such as California, Florida, Texas, North Carolina, Georgia, Michigan, Ohio, and Arizona—and home schooling, often incorporating remote components, now accounts for a substantial and growing share of students [27,28]. Similar publicly supported distance-education models exist internationally [29-43]: Canada’s provincial virtual learning systems, Mexico’s national programs such as Prepa en Línea–SEP and Telesecundaria, France’s CNED public distance-education system, Spain’s CIDEAD national distance school, India’s nationwide digital platforms including Diksha and ePathshala, Brazil’s publicly operated Centro de Mídias distance-education networks, and the United Kingdom’s legally recognized home-education framework supported by government-funded online instructional resources. These options—already used for health-related and other needs—can help protect children’s health while safeguarding their learning and development. 

    These steps help create layered protection that lowers the likelihood of Long COVID and other post-infection complications in children.

    Key considerations

    A large number of children are suffering from long COVID—and with many thousands of infections occurring daily, this number is steadily increasing. Some children may require long-term support due to the physical and cognitive effects of the illness, which can impact their ability to learn, pursue careers, and reach their full potential.

    Scientific evidence supports the use of layered mitigation such as: vaccination, respirators, ventilation, and flexible remote learning. Protecting children now is an investment in their long-term health, education, and quality of life.

    References

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