Children with coronavirus symptoms in Bedfordshire skyrocketed when schools reopened
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NHS 111 services recorded seven times more children with coronavirus symptoms in Bedfordshire when schools reopened, figures show.
NHS England data shows 1,437 cases when those aged 18 and under were logged with possible Covid-19 symptoms in the NHS Bedfordshire CCG area in September – seven times more than in August.
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Hide AdThis was the second-highest monthly total recorded for children, behind only the 2,340 who reported symptoms in March when the outbreak began.


In September, the vast majority (77 per cent) of reports for children were done through NHS 111 online assessments, with the remaining 23 per cent over the phone.
Across England, the number of children being reported with symptoms rose from just 21,000 in August to 186,000 in September.
Saul Faust, professor of paediatric immunology and infectious diseases at the University of Southampton, said children and family members always have respiratory viral symptoms in the autumn/ winter.
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Hide AdA rise in symptoms being reported, and tests requested, is what most experts would therefore have predicted, he said.
He added: "Children remain relatively unaffected by Covid – but there is no choice but to test on symptoms as otherwise cases will be missed.
"Parents are not overanxious – they are asking for tests per national guidance.
"The problem and solution has not changed since the start of the pandemic – we need a testing system, and track and trace alongside it, that has capacity and is effective."
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Hide AdOfficial guidance from the Department of Health and Social Care says parents should only book a test if their child has a high temperature, a new continuous cough, or a loss of smell or taste.
But they do not need one if they have just a runny nose, are sneezing or are feeling unwell.
In Bedfordshire, the number of adult users logging symptoms also increased significantly between August and September – from 984 to 2,290 – but this was not as steep as the rise among children.
Deputy Chief Medical Officer Jonathan Van-Tam said the infection data shows "intense transmission" of infections for 17 to 18-year-olds, but very low rates of increase for those up to the age of 16.
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Hide AdSpeaking at a briefing given by the country's top scientists, Professor Van-Tam added: "So the evidence that there is significant transmission in schools is not really borne out by the increased infection rates."
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