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Over 60 migrant children held at California facilities treated for COVID-19

1:55
Headlines from ABC News Live
Pool/Getty Images, FILE
ByMarlene Lenthang
May 07, 2021, 1:55 PM

Over 60 migrant children at two California holding centers have tested positive for COVID-19, sparking worry over the health of unaccompanied minors entering the U.S. from across the border.

At the Long Beach Convention Center housing 728 migrant children, 55 of them have tested positive for COVID-19 as of Thursday, Zhan Caplan, spokesperson of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, told ABC News. The center has a capacity to hold 1,000 children.

Meanwhile at the Pomona Fairplex site, which began housing migrant children Saturday and currently hosts 216 children, 14 have tested positive for COVID and are being housed separately, local ABC station KABC reported. The site has the capacity to hold about 2,500 children.

Sleeping quarters set up inside Exhibit Hall B for migrant children are shown during a tour of the Long Beach Convention Center on April 22, 2021 in in Long Beach, Calif.
Pool/Getty Images, FILE

Caplan said the Long Beach site conducts surveillance testing of the children every three days and those who test positive are moved to an isolation tent. UCLA Health, the center's onsite medical provider, cares for the infected kids.

He noted that "almost all" of the kids who tested positive are asymptomatic, "with the exception of one who has very mild symptoms."

Caplan said COVID-19 at the center "is a very well managed medical situation with full mitigation plans in place."

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MORE: COVID-19 cases among unaccompanied migrant children in facilities spark concerns over crowding

Bonnie Preston, regional director at HHS, told KABC most of the COVID-19 cases are among children who arrived to the center with the virus, testing positive when leaving Border Patrol custody. Those children were taken to intake centers in separate vehicles, she said.

"We have a team of infectious disease experts from the (U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention) on site who are working with program leads to implement CDC COVID-19 protocols as the site gears up and the census grows," Preston said.

Cmdr. Nick Munoz of the Office of the Assistant Secretary for Preparedness and Response speaks to city officials about the medical care migrant children will receive at the Long Beach Convention Center on April 22, 2021 in Long Beach, Calif.
Pool/Getty Images, FILE

The unaccompanied children will be held until they can be reunited with family or placed with sponsors.

There have been other reports of COVID-19 among migrant children. In early April, more than 100 cases were reported at the San Diego Convention Center, which was used to house unaccompanied minors and had reached its capacity of 1,450 kids. Caplan told the Long Beach Post that the facility currently has 30 positive cases.

As of Thursday, there are 23,003 children in CBP custody and HHS care, according to HHS data. About 400 asylum officers from U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services have been assigned as case managers to speed the release of children to sponsors, per Associated Press.

The United States has been grappling with a surge in migrants arriving at its southern border in recent months.

PHOTO: Children look out from inside a pod at the Donna Department of Homeland Security holding facility, the main detention center for unaccompanied children in the Rio Grande Valley, in Donna, Texas, March 30, 2021.
Children look out from inside a pod at the Donna Department of Homeland Security holding facility, the main detention center for unaccompanied children in the Rio Grande Valley run by the Customs and Border Protection, in Donna, Texas, March 30, 2021.
Dario Lopez-Mills/AP, FILE

Nearly 19,000 children traveling alone were stopped at the Mexican border in March, surpassing previous highs set during periods of heavy child migration in 2014 and 2019.

To handle the COVID-19 cases among migrants and overcrowded Customs and Border Patrol facilities, HHS has worked with the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention to increase shelter space in existing facilities and by modifying COVID-19 mitigation measures to free up space that was previously left empty for social distancing.

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