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How do most children get protection from the seriousness of COVID

Babies get a lot of protection from the coronavirus because their bodies develop a strong immune response against it.

This was revealed in a new medical study in the UK. 

covid baby children


Strong immune response protects young children from Covid-19, Research study!  

From the onset of the Corona Pandemic, it has been seen that the severity of the pandemic in children is usually mild, and very few have serious symptoms.

A study by the University of Bristol and the Bristol Royal Hospital for Children found that young children had higher levels of antibodies and immune cells than adults who were protected against the virus.

The researchers said the discovery showed that children were protected from the serious effects of COVID-19.

The study sought to find out why the virus causes mild to severe illness in children, especially in infants, who have a higher risk of other respiratory illnesses such as the flu.

The research team examined the immune response of 4 children under 3 months of age who were diagnosed with COVID at the onset of the Pandemic in March 2020.

The children's immune response was compared to that of their parents and other adult patients who had contracted the virus.

The researchers said the findings would help in the discovery of a vaccine that could mimic the protections available to children.

"A detailed study of infants who were protected from the severe severity of COVID-19 showed that protective immunity is based on specific antibodies and immune cells called the corona," he said. The virus is activated.

He added that it is known to be very useful in designing COVID vaccines in the future.

He said that immunizations that provide protection against future vaccines could be replicated in the body.

The research team will now conduct research on a large group of infants to confirm the results and compare their immune responses during the different months after the illness with the adult response.

The results of the study were published in the journal Cell Reports Medicine.

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