
Somali boy, Aged 13 Dies of Corona Virus in London
A 13-year-old boy who tested positive for coronavirus has died, a London hospital trust has said.
Ismail Mohamed Abdulwahab, from Brixton in south London, died in King’s College Hospital early on Monday. He is thought to be the youngest person to have died with the virus in the UK.
A spokesman for the trust said the boy’s death had been referred to the coroner, but gave no further details.
As of 17:00 BST on Monday, the number of UK deaths was 1,789.
The latest figures saw a daily increase of 381 –
Ismail’s family said they were “beyond devastated” by his death, in a statement released by a family friend.
They said he had no apparent underlying health conditions and tested positive for Covid-19 on Friday, a day after he was admitted to hospital.
BBC health correspondent Nick Triggle said it was rare for teenagers to become seriously ill after being infected with coronavirus.
“Just 0.3% of those who show symptoms require hospital care and 0.006% die – in other words, two out of every 30,000 infections among this age group will not survive,” he said.
“But it does happen, as this distressing case shows.”
Ismail’s family said he was admitted to the hospital in south London after he had begun showing symptoms and having difficulties breathing.
“He was put on a ventilator and then put into an induced coma but sadly died yesterday [Monday] morning,” they said.
“To our knowledge he had no underlying health conditions. We are beyond devastated.”
Mark Stephenson, college director at Madinah College, in south-west London, where Ismail’s sister works as a teacher, has set up a fundraiser to raise money for the funeral costs.
A statement on the page said Ismail died “without any family members close by due to the highly infectious nature of Covid-19”.

Analysis: What is the risk to young people?
By Richard Warry, assistant editor, health, BBC News
Research suggests that children and teenagers are much less likely to die from Covid-19 than adults.
Symptoms tend to be more mild in children, in contrast to flu, when children are at higher risk of complications.
Scientists have yet to determine why this might be. It is possible that children’s bodies are more able to cope with the virus.
Children’s immune systems are immature and often tend to overreact to infections. But the coronavirus appears not to stimulate their immune systems in this way.
One theory is that children might be better off because they have not been exposed to other, milder, types of coronavirus.
Adults have, and have developed antibodies as a result, but because those antibodies are not exactly matched to Covid-19 they might do the body more harm than good.
All this does not mean that young people – particularly those with underlying health conditions – are completely safe from the effects of Covid-19, as this case tragically shows.

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