Miami Herald (Sunday)

Too many of pregnant patients are refusing to take the COVID vaccine

- BY ALYSSA STEPHENSON-FAMY AND LINDA ECKERT Los Angeles Times

In our high-risk pregnancy clinics, there are three vaccine conversati­ons that we have with patients regularly.

First, there are patients who are vaccinated for COVID-19 and counting down the days until they can schedule a booster shot. Then there are patients who will accept vaccines for influenza and Tdap (tetanus, diphtheria, pertussis), but not COVID-19.

The third conversati­on is with expectant mothers who not only decline a COVID-19 vaccinatio­n but also other vaccines recommende­d in pregnancy.

We have that third conversati­on at least once a day with patients, and we have run out of talking points. We tell these women that if they catch COVID-19, they will be 15 times more likely to die, 14 times more likely to be intubated and many more times likely to have a pre-term birth than those who are uninfected or who have been vaccinated.

No matter what we say, these patients fear that the COVID vaccine will harm them or their babies — despite the overwhelmi­ng evidence to the contrary. They repeatedly turn down the chance to protect themselves and their babies from the coronaviru­s.

Our patients are not alone in their hesitancy. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, only 35.3% of pregnant women in the

United States were vaccinated for COVID-19 as of Nov. 6. The numbers are even lower among pregnant Black women (20.6%) and Latina women (31.5%).

More than 24,700 pregnant women in the United States have been hospitaliz­ed with COVID-19. As of Nov. 8, 227 had died from COVID nationwide. The deadliest month for pregnant women during the pandemic was not in

2020, before vaccines were available, but this past August, during the Delta-variant surge.

These numbers do not sway our pregnant patients to comply with our recommenda­tion for vaccinatio­n.

When vaccines first were approved, our patients’ fears were understand­able.

Because pregnant women were excluded from early COVID-19 vaccine trials, we OB-GYNs had little data to reassure them that they and their babies would be safe when vaccines first became available.

Once compelling data arrived showing that COVID-19 vaccines are safe for pregnant individual­s and confer protection to newborns, many expectant mothers and women planning to get pregnant had already made up their minds that the vaccines were dangerous, and it was too late to convince them otherwise.

We cannot take our vaccine-hesitant patients on a tour of the ICU, giving them a chance to experience the trepidatio­n we feel every time we put on specialize­d protective equipment just to enter the room of a pregnant patient sick with COVID.

There is no way to express to them the exhaustion and the anguish of trying to find COVIDposit­ive pregnant patients a hospital bed and a nurse to provide care when calls from community hospitals come in with a patient they need to transfer.

There is no way to convey the sense of relief our entire team feels when we successful­ly discharge a mother who has survived COVID and myriad other complicati­ons — though that feeling is inexorably bound to the frustratio­n of knowing that a vaccinatio­n could have prevented her admission altogether.

Hospital providers and staff are traumatize­d, overtaxed and in short supply. We know that when a pregnant mother arrives in the hospital with COVID, it may be only a matter of hours before she deteriorat­es and needs an emergency Cesarean section.

During this surgery, at least a dozen people — including the surgical team, neonatal-care specialist­s and anesthesio­logists — arrive in an operating room empty of the typical equipment to avoid contaminat­ing surgical supplies beyond the ones needed for this procedure with the virus. We leave our ID badges and pagers outside. We put on N-95 masks and positive airpurifyi­ng respirator­s hoods.

It is difficult to talk, breathe or hear each other. A team clears the elevators and hallways to transfer the patient to the operating room, where we wait. When the transfer team leaves, they literally seal the doors shut, with us inside.

We’ve done this again and again, for more than 18 months.

The contrast between our healthy, normal deliveries and our dire COVID deliveries, happening simultaneo­usly, is almost too much to reconcile.

But until pregnant women are vaccinated against COVID, we will need to do it all over again tomorrow.

Alyssa Stephenson-Famy is an associate professor of obstetrics and gynecology, specializi­ng in high-risk pregnancie­s and Linda Eckert is a professor of obstetrics and gynecology, specializi­ng in infectious diseases and immunizati­on at the University of Washington School of Medicine.

©2021 Los Angeles Times

 ?? Getty Images ?? Miami-Dade’s Ethics Commission conducts investigat­ions of possible violations of county, city ethics laws.
Getty Images Miami-Dade’s Ethics Commission conducts investigat­ions of possible violations of county, city ethics laws.
 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States