- When nurses at a Bangkok hospital found out that two mothers were taking their babies home using public transportation, they wanted to find a way to protect them from the coronavirus while traveling.
- The nurses handcrafted two tiny plastic masks for the babies.
- Typically, only children who are 2 or older are advised to wear
face masks , because babies younger than that are at risk of suffocating. - Visit Insider's homepage for more stories.
Healthcare workers in Bangkok are working to protect
When nurses at the Praram 9 Hospital in Bangkok learned that two mothers would be using public transportation to take their newborns home, they realized they needed to come up with an extra protective measure to guard the babies from being exposed to the coronavirus. They got to work and handcrafted two tiny face shields for the babies to wear while in transit, Time reported.
Nurses in Thailand made small masks for 2 newborns, but this was a unique case
The hospital shared images on Facebook of the protective equipment and emphasized that this was a unique situation and that newborns typically don't wear face masks. If a family, for example, takes a baby home in their own vehicle, the newborn would not don the face shield.
"Because safety is what we care about the highest," the hospital wrote in the Facebook post, which Time translated.
The Centers for Disease Control recommends that only children who are 2 and older wear face masks to safeguard against the coronavirus. Babies younger than that have a higher risk of suffocating while wearing a mask.
Babies are unlikely to develop the coronavirus while in utero, but they're at risk contracting it just like anyone else once they're born, according to the CDC. Children, in general, who get the coronavirus though, typically have mild symptoms or are asymptomatic.
Infants are more likely to have coronavirus-related complications than older children
Infants, however, are more susceptible to developing related complications than older children are, which may be due to the fact that their immune systems are still developing.
In the largest study of children with the coronavirus, the Centers for Disease Control analyzed 2,500 cases of coronavirus among children in the US who were 18 and younger.
Of 95 infected infants studied, 62% were hospitalized. The rate was 14%, at most, for those between the ages of 1 and 17.
While rare, the US has seen a few cases of babies dying from the coronavirus. Last month, an infant in Illinois died from the disease and was the youngest person to succumb to the coronavirus in the US at that point.
"We must do everything we can to prevent the spread of this deadly virus," Ngozi Ezike, director of the Illinois Department of Public