Mother of hospitalized 5-year-old says her decision not to get vaccinated was 'big mistake' - Action News
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Saskatchewan

Mother of hospitalized 5-year-old says her decision not to get vaccinated was 'big mistake'

A Regina mother grappling with regret over not getting vaccinated sooner says she hopes her five-year-old son's bout with COVID-19 will cause others to take the disease seriously.

Regina boy will need continued care and monitoring for potential heart damage

Janis Bennett's son, Maverick, ended up hospitalized last month, after contracting the virus that causes COVID-19. He was discharged this week, but his mother says he continues to have lingering symptoms. (Submitted by Janis Bennett)

A Regina mother says she's grappling with regret over not getting vaccinated sooner after her five-year-old son ended up in the hospital with COVID-19.

"If you're unsure about getting vaccinated, you should really think twice about it, because this virus is very real," said 25-year-old Janis Bennett.

"And I didn't think it would get me, because I did my part in sanitizing, keeping safe, social distancingand not going out when I don't need to go out."

She wasn't sure which vaccine to get, due to high blood pressure and other health concerns. It was adelay that she saidturned out to be a "big mistake."

Earlier this month, Bennettdeveloped what she thought was a sinus infection. She was low on energy and just wanted to lie in bed, but then she lost her sense of smell as well.

On Tuesday, Sept. 21, she woke to find her normally active, playful son, Maverick, in a very sick state.

Before he was hospitalized with COVID-19 last month, Bennett says her son was active and playful. (Submitted by Janis Bennett)

'It broke my heart'

"He wasn't really responding to me. He went to the bathroom, he didn't want to eat."

Bennett called 911, and when emergency workers arrived, they put her sonon an IV.

The pair were taken to the emergency room, where they tested positivefor COVID-19.

Bennett said her son looked lethargic, and his puffy eyes leakeda discharge. He also neededa chest X-ray and an echocardiogram.

If you're unsure about getting vaccinated, you should really think twice about it, because this virus is very real.- Janis Bennett

"He got so sick to the point he didn't want to eat anything, he didn't want to be touched, he couldn't move as well as he normally would," shesaid.

"It broke my heart to see him that way."

While both Bennett and her son were discharged on Sept. 28, she said he continues to have lingering symptoms and willhave to continue taking aspirin to reduce his risk of a blood clot or a stroke,at least until he sees a cardiologist in Novemberto be assessed for heart damage.

As of Sept. 30, there were three children under the age of 12 in hospitals in Saskatchewan, one of them in the intensive care unit (ICU), according to the Ministry of Health. The ministry also says it is working toward including hospitalization figures by age and vaccination status in its daily dashboard reporting.

Kids and COVID-19 risks

The Canadian Paediatric Society recently released a year-long study looking at all pediatric cases of COVID-19 in hospitals and ICUs.

That study found that in the first three waves of the pandemic, children and youth fared better than adultsand were at less risk of severe disease or death.

However, Dr. Charlotte Moore Hepburn, one of the lead investigators in the study, sayspediatricians don'twant to underplay the risk of COVID-19 to children, as thosewith and without underlying conditions can behospitalized or admitted to ICUs with COVID-19.

LISTEN |Dr. Moore Hepburn discusses kids and COVID-19 on The Morning Edition:

Children can also develop multisystem inflammatory syndrome (MIS-C) weeks after getting COVID-19, she noted, and the impact of the more contagious delta variant is still being studied.

With Pfizer seeking regulatory approvalin the U.S. for a vaccine for children aged five to 11, Moore Hepburn says she's encouraging families to get their children vaccinated when the time comes here in Canada.

"It remains an important disease in children, and children need to do their part in terms of both protecting themselves, their loved ones and their communities."

Bennett says that after seeing what she went through, her unvaccinated friends with children are getting their shots to protect their kids.

"They didn't want to be in the situation that I was in."