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A new study conducted by a doctor at the John Hopkins
University’s Bloomerg School
of Public Health recommends mother-to-be get a flu shot because it offers
protection during the pregnancy for both mother and baby. The study has shown
that a flu shot administrated to a pregnant woman can reduce a newborn’s risk
of infection by 63 percent.
Dr. Mark Steinhoff, a paediatrician with
the Johns Hopkins University Bloomberg School of Public Health, who led the
study, says the flu shot is “a two for one benefit,” since it protects both
mother and child. “Infants under six months have the highest rates of
hospitalization from influenza among children in the U.S. These admission rates are higher
than those for the elderly and other high-risk adult groups,” Steinhoff said. The
infections are mostly treatable in adults, but usually deadly in very young children.
The study, published online on Sept. 17 in
the New England Journal of Medicine,
was conducted in Bangladesh
in collaboration with researchers from the International Centre for Diarrheal
Disease Research (ICDDR,B). The research was conducted on a group of 340 pregnant
women in Bangladesh
and found the shots cut the risk of flu by 63 percent and the risk of
respiratory illness overall by 29 percent. The shot also lowered the chance of
getting fever and respiratory illness among the mothers by 36 percent.
Flu shots have been recommended for pregnant
women by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention since 1997, but
the advice has been widely ignored, Steinhoff said.
Influenza is a viral illness and its
symptoms include fever, cough, chills, sore throat, headache and muscle aches.
“Pregnant woman should be encouraged to be
vaccinated for the flu to protect their infants and themselves,” the study’s
senior author concluded.
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