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Mothers giving birth in December spent entire pregnancy in coronavirus pandemic

Published Thursday, December 24, 2020 9:36AM EST Michelle Farrugia was in the Dominican Republic on vacation with her husband when news hit in March that the COVID-19 health crisis had been declared a global pandemic. The couple rushed back to their Bowmanville, Ont., home as case counts began climbing worldwide. Soon after, amid the stress and commotion of the early days of the pandemic, Farrugia found out she was pregnant with their first child. “We were so excited, then reality kind of hit, like, oh my goodness, we re going to be pregnant during a pandemic,” Farrugia said. “We absolutely didn t think we d still be in it nine months later.”

Conceived and born in a pandemic: December babies show unique experience of pregnancy | iNFOnews

Melissa Couto Zuber Michelle Farrugia, her husband Mark Weldon and baby Nolan James Weldon, who was born on Dec. 3, 2020, are shown in a handout photo. THE CANADIAN PRESS/HO-Sutherland Photography MANDATORY CREDIT December 24, 2020 - 7:18 AM Michelle Farrugia was in the Dominican Republic on vacation with her husband when news hit in March that the COVID-19 health crisis had been declared a global pandemic. The couple rushed back to their Bowmanville, Ont., home as case counts began climbing worldwide. Soon after, amid the stress and commotion of the early days of the pandemic, Farrugia found out she was pregnant with their first child.

Pregnant women with COVID-19 at increased risk of hospitalization, ICU admission and early labour

Pregnant women with COVID-19 at increased risk of hospitalization, ICU admission and early labour
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Lack of data on pregnant women raises questions about whether they should get COVID-19 vaccine

Nathan Denette/The Canadian Press As health care workers across Canada prepare to receive a COVID-19 vaccine this week, one group is almost certain to be missing: pregnant women. The expert panel that advises Canadians on immunization published a position statement Monday that says the recently authorized shot should not be offered to people who are pregnant or breastfeeding until more evidence is available – although the statement also says the final decision should rest with women. The question of whether to immunize expectant mothers is especially urgent during this pandemic because the evidence so far suggests that the coronavirus is harder on pregnant women, sending more of them to hospitals and intensive-care units than women who are not pregnant.

Pregnant women with COVID-19 have increased risk of hospitalization, ICU admission, early labour: report

  VANCOUVER A national surveillance project looking at pregnancy and COVID-19 in Canada has released preliminary findings showing expectant mothers with the disease have a slightly greater chance of hospitalization, ICU admission and early labour. UBC obstetrics and gynaecology professor Dr. Deborah Money, who is leading the national project, told CTV News the early findings are based on information from 430 cases from B.C., Alberta and Ontario, and reflects a time period from March 1 to Sept. 30. “For otherwise young, healthy people, these pregnant woman did have slightly higher rates of admission to hospital and admission to an intensive care unit, when we compared to both the U.S. rates of that same age group in adult women, and a sampling we looked at from B.C. and Ontario,” she said, and added there was a 2.3 per cent rate of ICU admission in the pregnant group compared to 0.4 per cent in the other group.

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