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The research, led by the National Maternity and Perinatal Audit, looked at data involving more than 340,000 women who gave birth in England between the end of May 2020 and January 2021.
The study found:
3,527 had positive tests
Of those, 30 had stillbirths (deaths occurring after 24 weeks of pregnancy)
Scientists calculate 8.5 per 1,000 women who had a positive test went on to experience a stillbirt
h
This compares to 3.4 per 1,000 women who had a negative test
12% of women who had a positive coronavirus test gave birth prematurely (before 37 weeks)
This compares to 5.8% of women who had negative tests
It was more common for women who had Covid-19 at the time of birth to be younger and from a black, Asian or other minority ethnic background
Researchers say a higher risk of stillbirth and prematurity, as well asa greater chance of having a Caesarean section, remained even once factors such as the mother's age, ethnicity, socio-economic background and common health conditions were taken into account.
Babies born to women who tested positive were more likely to need special neonatal intensive care because they were born early and needed more support - rather than being infected with coronavirus itself.
SARS-CoV-2 infection at the time of birth is associated with higher rates of fetal death, preterm birth, preeclampsia, and emergency cesarean delivery. There were no additional adverse neonatal outcomes, other than those related to preterm delivery. Pregnant women should be counseled regarding risks of SARS-CoV-2 infection and should be considered a priority for vaccination.
originally posted by: PiratesCut
Yeah, because this crap was never properly tested in the first place as it should have been.
This burns my ***!!!
a reply to: GravitySucks
The International Stillbirth Alliance welcomes the systematic review by Barbara Chmielewska and colleagues (June, 2021),1 particularly its inclusion of stillbirths, because these are often missing from the global agenda. The 28% increased pooled odds in reported stillbirth during the COVID-19 pandemic is concerning. We wish to highlight some data limitations that will impede action to reduce these preventable deaths.
originally posted by: GravitySucks
originally posted by: PiratesCut
Yeah, because this crap was never properly tested in the first place as it should have been.
This burns my ***!!!
a reply to: GravitySucks
This is actually more about the possible effects of covid than being vaxxed or not. I'm viewing the not vaccinated statement as an aside. I''m not sure they did enough testing on pregnant women but don't know of have those statistics.
originally posted by: GravitySucks
a reply to: SeventhChapter
Then there's no hope?
originally posted by: Salander
a reply to: GravitySucks
I don't trust Mississippi's Department of Health. They participated in the Ivermectin misinformation project last month in spreading lies.
This sounds like it might be more lies.
I know one young woman who miscarried just after taking one of the clot shots in May.
originally posted by: Salander
a reply to: GravitySucks
I don't trust Mississippi's Department of Health. They participated in the Ivermectin misinformation project last month in spreading lies.
This sounds like it might be more lies.
I know one young woman who miscarried just after taking one of the clot shots in May.