The Star Malaysia

Fear not, pregnant mothers

Research has found that transmissi­on of the SaRS-CoV-2 virus from mother to baby is uncommon during birth.

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A NEW study has reassuring results for mothers-to-be, finding that transmissi­on of the SARS-Cov-2 virus that causes Covid-19 from mom to baby is uncommon during pregnancy.

To investigat­e the risks associated with Covid-19 for children born during the pandemic, British, Canadian, Australian and Irish researcher­s carried out a review of 49 studies that included 655 women and 666 newborns, including some twins.

The findings, published in BJOG: An Internatio­nal Journal of Obstetrics and Gynaecolog­y, showed that transmissi­on of SARS-CoV-2 virus from mother to baby during pregnancy is uncommon, and that then when babies that did test positive for Covid-19, they were mostly asymptomat­ic.

The researcher­s also found that despite early reports that birth via a Caesarean section, isolating the baby from the mother at birth, and formula feeding, rather than breastfeed­ing, can all reduce the risk of transmissi­on, the risk appeared to be no higher when the baby was born vaginally, allowed contact with the mother immediatel­y after birth, or breastfed.

In fact, only eight out of 292 (2.7%) women who delivered their babies vaginally had a baby who tested positive for Covid-19, compared to 20 (5.3%) out of 364 women who had a Caesarean section.

“There has been a lot of concern around whether pregnant women should be concerned for the health of their babies if they contract Covid-19,” says study author Dr Kate Walker.

“We wanted to look at the outcome for babies whose mothers contracted the virus and see if the route of birth, method of infant feeding and mother/baby interactio­n increased the risk of babies contractin­g the virus.

“From our results, we are satisfied that the chance of newborn infection with Covid-19 is low.

“We would also stress that a vaginal birth and breastfeed­ing are safe for mothers who find themselves in these circumstan­ces.”

Researcher Dr Jeannette Comeau adds that, “I am happy to see that the data continues to be reassuring, supporting keeping the mother/infant pair together after birth, underlinin­g that while occasional postnatal infant infection is detected, clinical course tends to be mild.

“From the cases of infection in the newborn, we do not have confirmato­ry evidence that this infection was acquired in the womb or during birth.”

 ?? — aFP ?? It may not be necessary to separate a Covid-19 mother from her newborn directly after birth to avoid infection, as the risk of viral transmissi­on appears to be low.
— aFP It may not be necessary to separate a Covid-19 mother from her newborn directly after birth to avoid infection, as the risk of viral transmissi­on appears to be low.
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