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Mom has regrets as delta variant continues to have big effect on youth

"I just want people to get their kids their shots. Everybody just needs to get the shot. It's a much better route than the one we're in."

LITTLE ROCK, Ark. — We've been talking about how the Delta variant is more transmissible and how it's hitting the unvaccinated harder. Now, it's happening to some of our youngest here in Arkansas. 

Angela Morris' child, Alexx Morris Cooper, is fighting for his life at Arkansas Children's Hospital. 

She said the hardest part about watching her child suffer is that the entire thing was preventable.

"It's very hard to see him in this situation. It's very hard not knowing if he's really going to come home anymore or not," Morris said. "It's heartbreaking. I wish I would've made better choices for him."

She has spent the last 12 days inside Arkansas Children's Hospital watching her 13-year-old breathe with the help of a ventilator.

Morris said it started with only flu-like symptoms.

"I really thought that since he stayed home a lot and when I went out, I always wore my mask. I really thought that he was going to be protected," she said.

Morris said that she decided against vaccinations for both herself and Alexx due to misinformation . 

"I just had a false sense of security that it was just like the flu and it wasn't that serious. Obviously it is that serious and it was that serious. Now, I can see," she said.

Alexx is one of three patients at Arkansas Children's Hospital on a ventilator and one of seven currently battling COVID-19.

Dr. Jessica Snowden, Arkansas Children's Hospital Chief of Infectious Diseases, said they are seeing more sick children as the Delta variant surges in the state.

"This is looking more like what we saw this winter and less of what we had been seeing during the springtime," Snowden said.

The various symptoms they've seen in children range from mild to severe, according to Snowden.

"We've had perfectly healthy children who end up in the hospital, in the ICU, with COVID-19 infection," she said. "So it is definitely something that could impact anyone." 

The age range is wide too, but Snowden said there's one common denominator. 

"All of the children we have admitted who are seriously sick with COVID-19 are either too young to get vaccinated, or haven't been vaccinated yet," she said.

While her child continues to fight, Morris doesn't want anyone else's child in the same situation.

"I just want people to get their kids their shots. Everybody just needs to get the shot. It's a much better route than the one we're in," she said.

Dr. Snowden has some tips for parents who have kids who are ineligible for the vaccine.

She said that it's important to remind your kids to practice the same guidelines that they learned at the very beginning of the pandemic: wash your hands, social distance, and wear a mask when you're in crowds. 

We have updated the article to change the teen's name to Alexx.   

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