# P-530. Mortality among U.S. Children <18 Years Old Hospitalized with Laboratory-Confirmed COVID-19 Infection, 12 States, March 2020–September 2023

**Authors:** Jiana baker, Christopher A Taylor, Jennifer Milucky, Kadam Patel, Monica E P Patton, Shua J Chai, Julie Plano, Kyle P P Openo, Patricia A Ryan, Elizabeth Reeg, Paige D’Heilly, Dominic Solhtalab, Adam Rowe, Sophrena Bushey, Melissa Sutton, Kristen Olsen, Fiona P Havers, Dennis Wang

PMC · DOI: 10.1093/ofid/ofaf695.745 · Open Forum Infectious Diseases · 2026-01-11

## TL;DR

This study examines the mortality rate among U.S. children under 18 hospitalized with confirmed COVID-19, finding that most deaths occurred in children with underlying conditions and those not up-to-date with vaccines.

## Contribution

The study provides detailed mortality data for pediatric COVID-19 hospitalizations in the U.S., emphasizing the role of comorbidities and vaccination status.

## Key findings

- 0.7% of hospitalized children with confirmed COVID-19 died, with 75% of deaths occurring in-hospital.
- Most deaths occurred in children with ≥1 underlying medical condition, particularly neurological, lung, or cardiovascular diseases.
- 93.8% of deceased children and 91.6% of survivors were not up-to-date with recommended vaccinations.

## Abstract

Pediatric COVID-19 hospitalizations have been well-described, but pediatric COVID-19-associated mortality data are limited.

COVID-19-Associated Hospitalization Surveillance Network (COVID-NET) conducts population-based surveillance for laboratory-confirmed COVID-19 hospitalizations in 12 states. After excluding trauma-related admissions, medical charts among children aged < 18 years hospitalized during March 2020–September 2023 were abstracted. Children who died in-hospital or within 30 days of discharge were identified by matching cases with death certificates to describe pediatric COVID-19-associated mortality.

Among 12,779 hospitalized children with complete chart abstraction, 88 (0.7%) died, including 66 (75.0%) in-hospital deaths and 22 (25.0%) deaths that occurred ≤30 days post-discharge (Figure). Thirty-two percent of children who died were < 1 year old and 23% were < 6 months old. Comparing children who died and those who survived, there were no significant differences in age or sex. A higher proportion of children who died than those who survived were Hispanic (37.5% vs 28.5%), while a lower proportion of children who died were non-Hispanic White (22.7% vs 33.1%) (p< 0.001 for overall racial differences) (Table 1). Compared with children who survived, children who died were more likely to have ≥1 (81.8% vs 51.1%) or ≥2 (52.3% vs 23.3%) underlying medical conditions, including neurological (37.5% vs 15.5%), chronic lung (27.3% vs 19.8%), and cardiovascular diseases (17.0% vs 7.0%) (p< 0.001 for all). Among COVID-19 vaccine-eligible children, 93.8% of those who died and 91.6% of those who survived were not up-to-date with COVID-19 vaccine recommendations (Table 2).

While COVID-19-associated pediatric hospitalizations resulting in death were rare, most were among children with comorbidities and COVID-19 vaccine-eligible children who were not up-to-date with vaccination, indicating missed opportunities to prevent severe illness and death through COVID-19 vaccination. One-quarter of deaths occurred within 30 days of discharge, highlighting the need for post-hospitalization surveillance for pediatric COVID-19 mortality estimates.

Melissa Sutton, MD, MPH, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Emerging Infections Program: Grant/Research Support

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** COVID-19 (MONDO:0100096)

## Figures

3 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12791954/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12791954