Most pregnant virus patients ‘from BAME backgounds’
MORE THAN half of pregnant women recently admitted to UK hospitals with coronavirus were from a black, Asian or minority ethnic (BAME) background, a new study has found.
The peer-reviewed research, published in the British Medical
Journal, looked at data for pregnant women admitted to 194 obstetric units in the UK with a positive Covid-19 infection between March 1 and April 14. It found that of the 427 pregnant women in hospital during that period, 233 (56 per cent) were from BAME backgrounds, of which 103 were Asian and 90 were black.
The high proportion of pregnant women from BAME groups remained after excluding major urban centres from the analysis. Researchers, led by Professor Marian Knight from the Nuffield Department of Population Health, University of Oxford, said the findings now require “urgent investigation and explanation”.
It comes as a Public Health England report found that people from BAME backgrounds with Covid-19 were at higher risk of death than white British people.
Most of the women in the study, based on data from the UK Obstetric Surveillance System, were in the late second or third trimester of their pregnancy. Some 69 per cent were classed as overweight or obese, 41 per cent were aged 35 or over, and a third had pre-existing health conditions.
Five of the women died – including three as a direct result of complications linked to coronavirus – while 41 (10 per cent) needed respiratory support in a critical care unit, the study found.
Twelve of 265 babies born to mothers in the study tested positive for Covid-19.
The study said most of the pregnant women had “good outcomes” and the transmission of coronavirus to infants was “uncommon”.