San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

NEWBORN DEATHS HIGHER AMONG UNVACCINAT­ED WOMEN

- BY ANDREW JEONG Jeong writes for The Washington Post.

Pregnant women who are unvaccinat­ed against the coronaviru­s are not only more likely to be hospitaliz­ed for COVID-19, but also at more risk of seeing their newborns die less than a month after birth, according to a peer-reviewed study in Scotland that was published Thursday.

The study was released in Nature Medicine, a monthly journal.

The authors looked at more than 144,000 pregnancy records going back to March 2020, when the first coronaviru­s case was detected in Scotland.

But the authors focused on data between December 2020 and October last year because that was when vaccine shots and tests were more widely available.

During that period, the unvaccinat­ed made up 77 percent of all pregnant women who were infected and more than 90 percent who required hospitaliz­ation and critical care.

All the infant deaths examined in the study occurred for mothers who had not been vaccinated at the time of their COVID-19 diagnoses, the authors said.

The results add urgency to vaccinatio­n efforts to protect both parents and babies during the remainder of the pandemic, the authors said: “Our findings emphasize the need for continued efforts to increase vaccinatio­n uptake in pregnant women . ... Vaccine hesitancy in pregnancy thus requires addressing.”

Pregnant people initially received inconsiste­nt advice about whether and when to get vaccinated, in part because they were not included in initial coronaviru­s vaccine trials.

In April, health officials in the United Kingdom and the United States began to actively encourage vaccinatio­n during pregnancy.

The risk of stillbirth or neonatal death — defined as the death of a baby less than a month old — appeared to be highest among women who delivered within four weeks of the onset of infection, the study said.

The risks were more than four times higher than those for babies born among the general population.

The study found that vaccine coverage was lower among pregnant women than for women in the general population, as has also been documented in the United States.

For instance, less than a third of women who gave birth in October had had two vaccine doses, when more than three-quarters of women in the general population had gotten two.

The Scottish study echoes what the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention published earlier this month and comes as misinforma­tion about vaccinatio­n during pregnancy has been spreading widely.

The CDC conducted a retrospect­ive study on more than 40,000 pregnant women and concluded in January that vaccinatio­n during pregnancy was not associated with increased risk for preterm birth, defined as prior to completing 37 weeks of pregnancy, or with giving birth to “smallfor-gestationa­l-age” babies.

“CDC recommends COVID-19 vaccinatio­n for women who are pregnant, recently pregnant, who are trying to become pregnant now, or who might become pregnant,” the agency says.

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