Why are children’s COVID-19 cases — and especially hospitalizations — so high? Is it a question of numbers being accurately counted, or something else? “It’s difficult to know for sure,” says Sonja Rasmussen, a professor of pediatrics and epidemiology at the University of Florida. “But I think as Florida is surging, we are going to see more cases in everybody.” Kids are less likely to get severely sick with the disease, but that doesn’t mean they’re immune. And because COVID-19 is so prevalent in Florida right now, with about 9,000 cases or more every day for the past three weeks and three back-to-back days of record deaths, it only makes sense that the virus is taking a toll on kids too. The coronavirus spread is exacerbated by continued reopening plans — and with parents letting their children run around with many other mask-less children. “As they get out in the world — they’re going and playing with friends, they’re seeing other families, they’re being in situations where they have the opportunity to get exposed to the virus that causes COVID-19 — the numbers are going to increase,” Rasmussen says. Though kids’ cases and hospitalizations have surged, deaths remain low. Only one child passed away due to COVID-19 during the eight-day surge, leading to a total of five childhood deaths in the state. Fifteen children in Florida have been diagnosed with the multisystem inflammatory syndrome, according to WEAR. The surge in pediatric cases does not bode well for school reopening. “It’s going to be a challenge in a school situation to keep that six-foot distance, to encourage kids to keep their masks on and not touch other kids’ stuff and not touch other kids,” Rasmussen says. “The chance of an outbreak in a school is higher if the rate is higher and if there’s a good likelihood in every school — or even every classroom — that there’s a child that’s infected.” The notion that deaths remain low, and unlikely among children with COVID-19 is cold comfort. It’s something, but as cases continue to climb, the only thing anyone knows for sure is that more social contact will lead to more cases. Even among kids.