Parents worry when news says infections are rising. Did relaxing COVID rules make kids sicker, or did common germs just return? A team in Nanjing, eastern China, looked at 7,473 children under 18 who visited a major hospital with breathing issues. They wanted to know what bugs were causing these visits now that strict restrictions were gone.
The researchers found that germs were still very common, detected in over 61% of cases. Young children, especially those aged four to six, faced the highest risk, with nearly 69% of them testing positive. The most frequent culprits were rhinovirus, a common cold virus, and mycoplasma pneumoniae, a bacteria that causes lung infections.
Seasons still mattered. Respiratory syncytial virus, which can be severe for little ones, peaked in winter. Mycoplasma was worst in mid-summer. Often, kids caught two bugs at once, happening in 17.5% of cases. The study highlights that while restrictions changed, the natural cycle of germs continued.
This work helps doctors understand what to expect and suggests better testing and vaccines. However, this is a look back at past data, so we cannot say for sure that lifting rules directly caused these specific infection rates. It simply maps the landscape of childhood illness.