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AUTHOR(S) Ethan A. Litman; Ying Yin; Stuart J. Nelson
This study aimed to investigate whether coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) is associated with adverse perinatal outcomes in a large national dataset and to examine rates of adverse outcomes during the pandemic compared to pre-pandemic period. This observational cohort study included 683,905 patients, between the ages of 12-50, hospitalized for childbirth and abortion between January 1, 2019 and May 31, 2021. During the pre-pandemic period, 271,444 women were hospitalized for childbirth. During the pandemic, 308,532 women were hospitalized for childbirth and 2,708 had COVID-19. Associations between COVID-19 and in-hospital adverse perinatal outcomes were examined using propensity score-adjusted logistic regression.
AUTHOR(S) Sadika Akhter; Feroza Akhter Kumkum; Farzana Bashar (et al.)
Like many countries, the government of Bangladesh also imposed stay-at-home orders to restrict the spread of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus-2 (COVID-19) in March, 2020. Epidemiological studies were undertaken to estimate the early possible unforeseen effects on maternal mortality due to the disruption of services during the lockdown. Little is known about the constraints faced by the pregnant women and community health workers in accessing and providing basic obstetric services during the pandemic in the country. This study was conducted to explore the lived experience of pregnant women and community health care providers from two southern districts of Bangladesh during the pandemic of COVID-19. The study participants were recruited through purposive sampling and non-structured in-depth interviews were conducted. Data was collected over the telephone from April to June, 2020. The data collected was analyzed through a phenomenological approach.
AUTHOR(S) Nina Mendez-Dominguez; Karen Santos-Zaldívar; Salvador Gomez-Carro (et al.)
In Mexico, the COVID-19 pandemic led to preventative measures such as confinement and social interaction limitations that paradoxically may have aggravated healthcare access disparities for pregnant women and accentuated health system weaknesses addressing high-risk patients’ pregnancies. This study's objective is to estimate the maternal mortality ratio in 1 year and analyze the clinical course of pregnant women hospitalized due to acute respiratory distress syndrome and COVID-19. A retrospective surveillance study of the national maternal mortality was performed from February 2020–February 2021 in Mexico related to COVID-19 cases in pregnant women, including their outcomes. Comparisons were made between patients who died and those who survived to identify prognostic factors and underlying health conditions distribution.
AUTHOR(S) Ipek Gurol-Urganci; Jennifer E. Jardine; Fran Carroll (et al.)
The aim of this study was to determine the association between SARS-CoV-2 infection at the time of birth and maternal and perinatal outcomes. This is a population-based cohort study in England. The inclusion criteria were women with a recorded singleton birth between 29th May 2020 and 31st January 2021 in a national database of hospital admissions. Maternal and perinatal outcomes were compared between pregnant women with a laboratory-confirmed SARS-CoV-2 infection recorded in the birth episode and those without.
AUTHOR(S) Claus Klingenberg; Sahil K. Tembulkar; Anna Lavizzari (et al.)
AUTHOR(S) Alhassan Abdul-Mumin; Cesia Cotache-Condor; Kingsley Appiah Bimpong (et al.)
AUTHOR(S) Rachel Wangari Kimani; Rose Maina; Constance Shumba (et al.)
AUTHOR(S) Rajani Dube; Subhranshu Sekhar Kar
UNICEF Innocenti's Children and COVID-19 Library is a database collecting research from around the world on COVID-19 and its impacts on children and adolescents.
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