People who are at greater risk for severe COVID-19 illness would be wise to go slow even when local restrictions are released. Continuing to self-isolate, maintain distancing, and following all the other measures described on the Slowing the Spread of the Coronavirus page even after they aren't required would be wise. Also wise would be to insist that people caring for at-risk people continue to follow those precautions, too.
PlaneTree Health Library's mission is to guide the public to trustworthy, accurate, and free health and medical information. In operation since 1989, it is a free, public, patient and consumer health library and 501(c)3 nonprofit organization. It does not accept advertisements; it has no commercial relationship with the sources of information on these webpages. Visit our online information guides linked from our main website at: www.planetree-sv.org
SARS-CoV-2 is a coronavirus, as are viruses that cause the common cold - but is more easily transmitted than a cold. It is spread by infected people, who often don't know they are infected because they have no symptoms (asymptomatic), because their own symptoms have not yet developed, or because early symptoms mimic a cold, flu, allergy or asthma.
Broadly speaking, our chances of catching this disease are greater when:
Unfortunately, these factors also seem to raise the chances of having a more severe case of COVID-19.
Early in this pandemic, older adults were especially vulnerable to COVID-19. While older people also tend to have chronic health conditions, or to be living in care centers, the number of fatalities among healthy seniors is higher than can expected from those factors alone. As this virus moved through populations, cases in younger people increased.
At the present time, those most at-risk for serious disease (hospitalization or death) are:
Data from many different states in the U.S. show that Black and Latinx people are more likely to catch COVID-19 and to have more serious illness, perhaps because of disparities in healthcare. Native reservations in the U.S. have been among the hardest hit regions in the U.S., too.
Besides having a higher risk of catching COVID, people with chronic illness or vulnerable medical conditions are more likely to worsen or die from those medical conditions if they are infected with COVID (so-called "excess deaths").
People with disabilities (physical, cognitive, behavioral or developmental) that make their activities of daily living more difficult for them, or who are dependent on other people for help with their activities of daily living, are also more vulnerable. See the CDC guidance below for protections (including disease-specific action plans) for these conditions.
COVID-19 in children may show different symptoms than adults, or may not show any symptoms at all. (Rarely some children sick with COVID-19 experience multisystem inflammatory syndrome (MIS-C), which can be quite serious - but is treatable.)
Vaccines and boosters (including the bivalent booster) have been approved for children as young as 6 months old and up.
Parents face difficult decisions on how to best protect their kids; information from these sources may help.
Not having a stable home makes it extremely difficult to take care of one's health, especially during this pandemic. While services for the homeless are greatly needed, they need extra precautions as well.
While there is still much to learn about COVID-19, as of this writing, there is general agreement that these underlying medical conditions are associated with more severe COVID-19 symptoms:
People with these conditions may also be more at risk for severe COVID-19: (it's still unclear)
See the links below for instructions (including disease-specific action plans) on how to protect yourself if you have any of these conditions.
The text on this page is copyright PlaneTree Health Library, licensed under Creative Commons CC BY-NC-SA 4.0. Linked contents are the responsibility of their creators or copyright holders.