Times Colonist

Study offers reassuranc­e on COVID shots, women’s periods

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One of the first studies to track whether COVID-19 vaccinatio­n might affect women’s periods found a small and temporary change.

Research published Wednesday tracked nearly 4,000 U.S. women through six menstrual cycles and on average, the next period after a shot started about a day later than usual. But there was no change in the number of days of menstrual bleeding after COVID-19 vaccinatio­n.

Some women have reported irregular periods or other menstrual changes after their shots. The National Institutes of Health is funding studies to examine if there’s any link.

A team analyzed data from a birth control app called Natural Cycles, cleared by the Food and Drug Administra­tion for women to track their menstrual cycles and tell when they’re most likely to become pregnant.

Menstrual cycles are counted from the first day of one period to the first day of the next. Slight variations from month to month are normal, and stress, diet, even exercise can spur temporary changes.

The study included women with “the most normal of normal” cycle length, averaging between 24 and 38 days. Researcher­s tracked vaccinated women for three cycles before the shots and the immediate three cycles after, including the months they received a dose — and compared them to unvaccinat­ed women.

A subset of 358 women who got both vaccine doses in the same menstrual cycle saw a slightly larger change to their next cycle length, on average two days. About 10% of them had a change of eight days or more, but subsequent­ly returned to normal ranges.

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