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New York City will test children for coronavirus antibodies after 38 developed a mysterious inflammatory illness

Blake Dodge   

New York City will test children for coronavirus antibodies after 38 developed a mysterious inflammatory illness

New York City will begin testing children for antibodies after at least 38 developed a mysterious illness associated with the novel coronavirus, Mayor Bill de Blasio said on Twitter.

The illness, which de Blasio described as a rare multi-system "inflammatory syndrome," has killed three children in the state, Gov. Andrew Cuomo announced on Saturday. One of them, a five-year-old, lived in the city, according to the mayor.

Among the 38 cases so far, nearly half tested positive for COVID-19, the disease caused by the coronavirus. Among those who tested negative, however, the vast majority had antibodies, de Blasio said at a Sunday press briefing.

While the accuracy of certain antibody tests has been called into question, they're the only measure we have to detect infections. They look for antibodies that the body makes to fight off the coronavirus, which stick around in the blood for a while after symptoms pass.

They work best after two weeks since symptom onset, whereas diagnostic or "molecular" tests that use swabs and take respiratory samples find the virus earlier on, experts told Business Insider.

The city has been partnering with NYC Health + Hospitals (NYCHHC) and diagnostics company BioReference Laboratories for antibody testing launched in early May. It's not yet clear whether a separate arrangement will facilitate the new testing for kids, but de Blasio said that NYCHHC locations will conduct it.

BioReference's test is 91.2% sensitive, meaning it finds antibodies in coronavirus-positive people 91.2% of the time, according to the company. And it's 97.3% specific, which means it finds no antibodies in coronavirus-negative people 97.3% of the time.

The measures are important for determining true positives and true negatives, respectively.

Prior to this week, only 4 deaths among children less than 10 years old had been reported in the city, according to data compiled by the health department. It's a phenomenon that's both relieved and confounded scientists who still aren't sure how vulnerable children are to the virus or whether they're able to pass it to others.

The mayor encouraged residents with children experiencing fever, rash, abdominal pain, and vomiting to contact their doctors right away, but those without doctors can call 311 instead, he added.

"To every parent out there: early detection is the key to fighting this," de Blasio wrote on Twitter. "It can be treated. If you see these symptoms, take them seriously and act immediately."

Read the original article on Business Insider

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