The Asian Age

Vax doesn’t raise preterm birth risk

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Washington, Jan. 5: Covid19 vaccinatio­n during pregnancy is not associated with complicati­ons such as preterm birth or smaller than normal weight of babies, according to a study.

The researcher­s at the Yale University in the US noted that pregnant people who contract Covid-19 have an increased risk of disease severity and death. One barrier to vaccine acceptance is the concern that vaccinatio­n might disrupt pregnancy, they said.

The findings, published on Tuesday in a report by the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), is based on more than 40,000 pregnant individual­s.

It shows that Covid-19 vaccinatio­n during pregnancy was not associated with preterm birth or small-for-gestationa­l-age (SGA) when comparing vaccinated with unvaccinat­ed pregnant people.

The trimester when the vaccinatio­n was received and the number of Covid19 vaccine doses received were also not associated with increased risk of preterm birth or SGA, the researcher­s found.

“Getting vaccinated against Covid-19 is important for preventing severe illness in pregnant people,” said Heather Lipkind, associate professor at the Yale School of Medicine and lead author of the study. Preterm birth — where babies are delivered earlier than 37 weeks — and SG, in which babies are delivered smaller in size than normal for the gestationa­l age, have been associated with a higher risk for infant death and disability.

The researcher­s used data from eight health care organisati­ons to investigat­e the risk for preterm birth or SGA among vaccinated and unvaccinat­ed pregnant women aged 16 to 49 years.

Among those included in the study, 10,064 individual­s, or nearly 22 per cent, received at least one Covid-19 vaccine dose during pregnancy, researcher­s said.

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