Leicester Mercury

Half of pregnant with virus BAME

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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 Medial 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%) 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, which was based on data from the UK Obstetric Surveillan­ce System, were in the late second or third trimester of their pregnancy.

Some 69% were classed as overweight or obese, 41% 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%) 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 – six of them within 12 hours of being born.

The study said most of the pregnant women had “good outcomes” and the transmissi­on of coronaviru­s to infants was

“uncommon”. “The high proportion of women from black or minority ethnic groups admitted with infection needs urgent investigat­ion and explanatio­n,” the study said.

The authors said the report was produced at a time when active transmissi­on of coronaviru­s was still occurring, with about 100 infected pregnant women admitted to hospital in the UK each week.

“We sought to collect national, population-based informatio­n on severe SARSCoV-2 infection, defined as hospital admission, to capture the incidence and outcomes of severe disease in pregnancy,” the authors said.

“This study does not therefore provide any informatio­n about overall infection rates or the possibilit­y of asymptomat­ic infection.”

Meanwhile, travellers arriving in the UK will be required to self-isolate for 14 days from today under Government measures to guard against a second wave of Covid-19. All passengers – bar a handful of exemptions – will have to fill out an online locator form giving their contact and travel details and the address of where they will isolate.

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