For kids with COVID-19, everyday life can be a struggle

Brooklynn Chiles, 8, glances up from her smart phone at home where she lives with her mother, Danielle Mitchell in Washington, Sunday, Jan. 9, 2022. Brooklynn lost her father to COVID-19 last year and has tested positive three times herself. She is part of a NIH-funded multi-year study at Children's National Hospital to look at impacts of COVID-19 on children's physical health and quality of life. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)

Family photos of Danielle Mitchell and Rodney Chiles and their daughter, Brooklynn Chiles, decorate the kitchen refrigerator in Washington, Wednesday, Feb. 9, 2022. Rodney died of COVID-19 last year and Brooklyn has tested positive three times. Brooklynn is part of a NIH-funded multi-year study at Children's National Hospital to look at impacts of COVID-19 on children's physical health and quality of life. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)

Brooklynn Chiles, 8, sits outside exam rooms during a followup visit to Children's National Hospital in Washington, Friday, Feb. 11, 2022. Brooklynn's father, Rodney Chiles, died of COVID-19 last year and she has tested positive three times. Brooklynn is part of a NIH-funded multi-year study at Children's National Hospital to look at impacts of COVID-19 on children's physical health and quality of life. (AP Photo/Carolyn Kaster)

WASHINGTON — Eight-year-old Brooklynn Chiles fidgets on the hospital bed as she waits for the nurse at Children’s National Hospital. The white paper beneath her crinkles as she shifts to look at the medical objects in the room. She’s had the coronavirus three times, and no one can figure out why.