MoH urges parents to vaccinate children in light of Omicron risks (18.04.2022)
 Posted on : Apr 20, 2022, 11:18AM   21 total views  Category : Local News
Six were diagnosed with Multi-system Inflammatory Syndrome (MISC), of which four experienced severe symptoms that required intensive care

BY James Kon & Azlan Othman

Parents have been urged to get their children vaccinated against COVID-19 after some have experienced health complications after being infected with the Omicron variant.

 

Minister of Health Dato Seri Setia Dr Haji Mohd Isham bin Haji Jaafar said it is unlike earlier cases of infection, where children did not show any symptoms.

 

For the Omnicron variant, he said children typically exhibited mild symptoms, but some may experience more severe effects.

 

“Omicron affects children, even though it is milder in scale, we should be well-aware of this,” he said.

 

Since February, eight children aged two months to 10 have been found with health complications after being infected with COVID-19.

 

Six were diagnosed with Multi-system Inflammatory Syndrome (MISC), of which four experienced severe symptoms that required intensive care.

 

MISC causes inflammation in organs and blood vessels, which could lead to myocarditis, said the minister.

 

It also leads to low blood pressure, requiring medication to stabilise, he said, adding that the functions of the liver, kidneys and bone marrow were also affected.

 

“One child needed surgery on the abdomen area,” he said.

 

Meanwhile, two other children, both under the age of one, were not diagnosed with MISC, but still needed intensive care.

 

The minister said in light of the risk of health complications due to COVID-19, parents should consider immunising their children eligible for the programme.

 

The country’s vaccination rate remained unchanged from yesterday, said the minister, as vaccination centres were not open.

 

Around 26.1 per cent of children five- to 11-years-old have received the first dose of the COVID-19 vaccine while 62.8 per cent of the population have been boosted against the virus.

 

-- Courtesy of Borneo Bulletin

HITS: