people who contract covid towards the end of their pregnancy may be more likely to have babies born prematurely, according to
a new study published in the journal plos one — but the risk of pregnancy loss isn’t any higher.
researchers used anonymous data from maccabi healthcare services in israel from 2,753 women who contracted the virus during pregnancy and another 2,753 pregnant women who didn’t have covid. every woman in the study was pregnant with a single baby — no twins — between feb. 2020 and july 2021, and was matched up with a woman of similar age and socioeconomic status in the other group.
they found that women who got sick during their first or second trimester — up until 26 weeks of pregnancy — were 2.76 times more likely than pregnant women without covid to experience preterm birth. but women who got sick in their third trimester — from 27 weeks on — were a full seven times more likely to give birth preterm.
the study found that most other pregnancy markers remained fairly similar, whether or not the expectant mother had covid. the rates of child loss were about the same, as were the rates of caesarean sections.
“the results are encouraging and reassuring that covid-19 infection during pregnancy is not associated with any type of pregnancy loss,”
said dr. tal patalon, one of the study’s authors. “however, it should be remembered that the research group tested the covid pre-delta variants, and does not refer to the dominant variant today, which is omicron. we continue to conduct research to provide real-world data and knowledge to the public and decision-makers.”