No Longer ‘Hidden Victims,’ Children Are Dying as Virus Surges in Indonesia

Hundreds have died from Covid-19 in recent weeks, many of them under the age of 
5.

By Richard C. Paddock & Muktita Suhartono  The New York Times,  July 25, 2021
https://www.nytimes.com/2021/07/25/world/asia/children-deaths-virus-indonesia.html


Hundreds of children in Indonesia have died from the coronavirus in recent 
weeks, many of them under age 5, a mortality rate greater than that of any 
other country and one that challenges the idea that children face minimal risk 
from Covid-19, doctors say.

The deaths, more than 100 a week this month, have come as Indonesia confronts 
its biggest surge yet in coronavirus cases over all — and as its leaders face 
mounting criticism that they have been unprepared and slow to act.

“Our numbers are the highest in the world,” the head of the Indonesian 
Pediatric Society, Dr. Aman Bhakti Pulungan, said of the death rate.

“Why are we not giving the best for our children?”

The jump in child deaths coincides with the surge of the Delta variant, which 
has swept through Southeast Asia, where vaccination rates are low, causing 
record outbreaks not only in Indonesia, but in Thailand, Malaysia, Myanmar and 
Vietnam as well.

Indonesia, the world’s fourth-most populous nation, this month overtook India 
and Brazil in the number of daily cases, becoming the new world epicenter of 
the pandemic.

Based on reports from pediatricians, children now make up 12.5 percent of the 
country’s confirmed cases, an increase over previous months, said Dr. Aman, 
executive director of the pediatric association.

More than 150 children died from Covid-19 during the week of July 12 alone, he 
said, with half the recent deaths involving those younger than 5.

Over all, Indonesia has reported more than three million cases and 83,000 
deaths, but health experts say the actual figures are many times higher because 
testing has been very limited. Critics say the nation’s leaders have relegated 
health experts to a secondary role in combating the spread of the virus, even 
after the Delta variant devastated India earlier this year.

“The government has never taken this pandemic seriously from the beginning,” 
said Alexander Raymond Arifianto, a research fellow at the S. Rajaratnam School 
of International Studies in Singapore. “The voice of the actual experts in how 
to best handle the pandemic is simply not being heard.”

On Sunday, Indonesia’s president, Joko Widodo, extended some restrictions on 
gatherings and commerce through Aug. 2 but relaxed others, such as allowing 
traditional markets to resume operating as usual with strict health protocols.

Mr. Joko, a former businessman who has been reluctant to impose lockdowns that 
slow the economy, had said he would begin lifting restrictions if case numbers 
declined.

“With our hard work together, God willing, we can soon be free from Covid 19 
and the socio-economic activities of the community can return to normal,” he 
said Sunday evening.

More than 800 children in Indonesia under the age of 18 have died from the 
virus since the pandemic began, Dr. Aman said, but the majority of those deaths 
have occurred only in the past month.

“Until now, children have been the hidden victims of this pandemic,” said Dr. 
Yasir Arafat, Asia health adviser to the nonprofit group Save the Children. 
“Not anymore.”

“Not only are countries like Indonesia seeing record numbers of children dying 
from the virus,” Dr. Yasir said, “but we’re also seeing an alarming rise in 
children missing out on routine vaccinations and nutrition services that are 
critical for their survival, which should ring major alarm bells.”

Health experts said a number of factors contributed to the high number of 
deaths among children. Some could be vulnerable to the virus because of 
underlying health conditions such as malnutrition, obesity, diabetes and heart 
disease, doctors said.

The country’s low vaccination rate is another factor. Just 16 percent of 
Indonesians have received one dose and only 6 percent have been fully 
vaccinated, according to the Our World in Data project at the University of 
Oxford. Like other countries, Indonesia does not vaccinate children under 12 
and only recently began vaccinating those between 12 and 18.

At the same time, many hospitals have been stretched beyond their limit by the 
recent surge in cases, with patients waiting in hallways and overflow tents for 
a bed in a ward to open. Few hospitals are set up to care for children with 
Covid.

“If the children get sick, where are we going to take them?” Dr. Aman asked. 
“To the emergency room? Emergency wards are overwhelmed with adults. And as you 
have seen for the past couple of weeks, people have to wait at the emergency 
room for days. How do we expect children to go through that?”

With hospitals at capacity, about two-thirds of adult patients are in isolation 
at home, which increases the chance that children will be infected, said Edhie 
Rahmat, executive director for Indonesia at the nonprofit health-care group 
Project HOPE.

Infants are also put at risk by the tradition of friends and neighbors visiting 
a newborn’s home to celebrate the birth, he said.

“These newborns are being released from hospitals with negative Covid-19 
status, but later contracting Covid-19 and dying after being visited by 
neighbors and extended family members,” Mr. Edhie said. “It is heartbreaking.”

Dr. Aman said educating the public and getting more people to comply with 
health protocols would be a good start in protecting children.

“It all goes back to the adults,” he said. “The adults are the stubborn ones. 
They refuse to wear a mask. They bring their children to crowded places.”

Indonesia, a vast archipelago of 17,500 islands, also ranks in the bottom third 
among nations in testing, said Dr. Windhu Purnomo, a lecturer in epidemiology 
at Airlangga University in Surabaya.

The country’s health minister, Budi Gunadi Sadikin, has set a goal of 400,000 
tests a day. But the country has never come close to that figure. Last week, 
the number dipped below 115,000.

Positive tests are averaging more than 30 percent, a sign that the virus is 
spreading rapidly and that not enough tests are being conducted. The World 
Health Organization recommends a positivity rate below 5 percent.

“If we evaluate these numbers, this means that the emergency restrictions 
haven’t been working,” Dr. Windhu said.

Luhut Pandjaitan, the coordinating minister for maritime affairs and investment 
and perhaps Mr. Joko’s most trusted adviser, is leading the country’s Covid-19 
response. He pledged last week that the government would increase testing and 
tracing and provide more isolation centers, especially in densely populated 
neighborhoods.

“Believe me that we are doing our best, but this Delta variant is a difficult 
situation and that is the reality of it,” Mr. Luhut told reporters. “No country 
in the world can claim they have overcome it.”

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