CDC
recommends pregnant women get COVID-19 vaccine
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[August 12, 2021]
By Michael Erman
(Reuters) -Pregnant women should be
vaccinated against COVID-19, based on a new analysis that did not show
increased risk for miscarriage, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention said on Wednesday.
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The CDC said it has found no safety concerns for pregnant people in
either the new analysis or earlier studies. It said miscarriage
rates after vaccination were similar to the expected rate. Pregnant
women can receive any of the three vaccines given emergency
authorization -- Pfizer, Moderna or Johnson & Johnson.
The agency had not previously recommended pregnant women get
vaccinated but had said that they should discuss vaccination with
their health care providers.
Sascha Ellington, team lead for the Emergency Preparedness and
Response team in CDC's Division of Reproductive Health, said that
vaccine uptake in pregnant women has been low, with only 23%
receiving at least one vaccine dose.
"We want to increase that," Ellington said, noting that the agency
was working on strategies to have obstetricians and gynecologists
become vaccine providers. "We want women to be protected. We're not
seeing any safety signals and so the benefits of vaccination really
do outweigh any potential or unknown risks."
Pregnancy increases the risk of severe illness from COVID-19,
according to the CDC, and COVID-19 during pregnancy increases the
risk for preterm birth.
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The CDC said it now recommends
all people 12 years and older get vaccinated
against COVID-19, including people who are
pregnant, breastfeeding, trying to get pregnant
or might become pregnant in the future.
"We are aware of the myths that have been
spreading related to fertility. They are not
based on any evidence. There's no science that
backs that up," Ellington said. "We hope this
helps."
The new guidance comes as cases and
hospitalizations https://tmsnrt.rs/2WTOZDR have
surged across the country in the past month.
Some hospitals in Arkansas, Florida, Louisiana
and Mississippi have run out of beds, and the
outbreak is spreading beyond the epicenter in
the U.S. South to Oregon and Washington state.
(Reporting by Michael Erman in New York; Editing
by Lisa Shumaker)
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