โ€˜COVID Orphans': Estimated 40,000 U.S. Children Have Lost at Least 1 Parent to COVID

As COVID-19 turns more children into orphans, siblings step up to fill the void

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Juan Martinez is not your typical Southern California teenager. 

Martinez was forced into a huge responsibility at age 19 โ€” caring for four of his younger siblings after his 43-year-old mother died from coronavirus last August.

The Palmdale, California, teen says he now cooks, cleans and helps his siblings, aged 7 to 16, with their online schooling. But this isn't even the hardest part.

โ€œItโ€™s still hard on them, but I try to comfort them the best way I can,โ€ Martinez said of his grieving siblings. โ€œAt times, weโ€™ll cry together. When I told them, there was screaming and crying. I spoke to them and told them I would do the best I can to raise them and I wouldn't let anything happen to them.โ€ 

With more people getting vaccinated and schools reopening, the lives of many U.S. children are starting to feel a bit more "normal."  Yet, according to new research, about 40,000 children in the U.S. are dealing with an irreparable reality: the loss of one or both parents from COVID-19.

Black children have been disproportionately affected. Although they make up only 14% of children in the U.S., Black children account for 20% of kids who have lost a parent to COVID-19.

The researchers, including one from the University of Southern California, said their findings demonstrate yet another reason to reduce COVID-19 deaths among all age groups. They point to prior research that shows children who lose a parent are at a higher risk of traumatic grief, depression and poor educational outcomes.

Study co-author Emily Smith-Greenaway is an associate professor of sociology and spatial sciences at the USC Dornsife College of Letters, Arts and Sciences.

โ€œMany of these negative outcomes associated with parental death don't go away,โ€ Smith-Greenaway said. "They persist into young adulthood, even older adulthood."

Sudden parent deaths, like those caused by COVID-19, can be particularly traumatizing for children, Smith-Greenaway said. The fact that these losses are occurring at a time of social isolation, economic hardship and closed schools may leave many children who experience the death of a parent without structure and emotional support.

Smith-Greenaway wants the federal government to start collecting the names of children who have lost a parent or primary caregiver and connect them with services โ€” similar to the effort to support families after the 9/11 tragedy.

โ€œYou know, to actually be the first to work to enumerate how many kids are affected, we really hope this will set into motion a more comprehensive federal response,โ€ Smith-Greenaway said.  

The research shows three-quarters of children who lost a parent to COVID were adolescents, and 1 in 4 were children younger than 10. The analysis used COVID-19 deaths and death counts between February 2020 and February 2021. 

Besides taking care of his siblings, Martinez is now working as a security guard and has moved his family of five into a Los Angeles-area mobile home. He relies on a babysitter to watch the other kids while he's at work.

Martinez still fights lingering fatigue from his own battle with COVID-19. But he and his siblings are managing as a family, although he said this past Mother's Day was especially difficult for all of them.

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