Sunday Express

Stillborn grief as mum urges people to get jab

- By Tony Whitfield

A MOTHER whose baby was stillborn while she was seriously ill in hospital with Covid has urged people to get their vaccine to save themselves the “agony” of becoming severely unwell.

Rachel, 38, whose surname was not given, was so ill she did not realise she had given birth to her son Jaxon, at 24 weeks, in August last year.

She had gone to get her vaccine while pregnant but said that there had still been uncertaint­y at that early stage in the rollout over whether expectant women should have it.

She said she and her family were devastated by their loss, and urged people to take up the offer of jabs.

She said: “I did initially go to get the vaccine but at the time the advice was not to have it. I thought I would have the vaccine when I’d had the baby but it wasn’t meant to be.”

As more data has emerged showing the vaccine to be safe, there have been repeated calls for pregnant women to get jabbed.

Last week, the Department of Health and

Social Care cited statistics from the UK Obstetric Surveillan­ce System which it said showed 96.3 per cent of pregnant women admitted to hospital with Covid symptoms between May and October were unvaccinat­ed. A third of them required respirator­y support.

Rachel, from Bilston in

Wolverhamp­ton, was in a coma for three-and-a-half months after contractin­g the virus.

She encouraged everyone eligible to get vaccinated. “I would say take it – it’s a two-minute thing that can save months of agony if you end up like I was.”

Last year, experts warned that while uptake of the vaccine among pregnant women was improving, they were worried about some groups shunning the jabs, including younger women, those in deprived areas and women from black and minority ethnic communitie­s.

Speaking about her loss, Rachel said: “I didn’t actually know I had given birth. I was on drugs so they wanted to tell me when I wasn’t sedated, and the obstetrici­an informed me a few days later.

“My emotions were disbelief. One minute you’re having a scan and a gender reveal, naming the baby and getting excited, and then there was this sudden loss.

“I was only able to see him once. Normally, I’d have been able to spend a lot more time with him and to hold him. But I didn’t get to do that because of the circumstan­ces.”

She said things have been difficult for her partner and her 18-yearold son.

“We’re all devastated at our loss,” she said. “We were all very excited at this new life, then we were left with nothing.”

Rachel thanked staff at New Cross Hospital and Glenfield Hospital in Leicester, for their care.

‘I didn’t even

know I had given birth’

 ?? Picture: ROYAL WOLVERHAMP­TON NHS TRUST/PA ??
Picture: ROYAL WOLVERHAMP­TON NHS TRUST/PA

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