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There is growing evidence that neocooproid pneumonia (COVID-19) increases the risk of hospitalization and mechanical aeration and premature birth in pregnant women.
, however, the impact of COVID-19 and its severity on maternal mortality is unclear.
the severity and outcome of infection with the new coronavirus (SARS-CoV-2) among pregnant women in Washington state, published recently in the American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology, "Disease Severity, Pregnancy Outcomes and Maternal Deaths among Pregnant Patients WITH-CoV-2 Infection in Washington State."
this is a multi-center retrospective queue study that includes pregnant women who were confirmed to be infected with the new coronavirus by PCR between March 1 and June 30, 2020.
these centers cover 61 percent of the state's annual births.
compared the death rate of the subjects with that of adults of the same age and the death rate of the new coronary pneumonia.
the outcomes of mothers and newborns based on the three months of infection and the severity of the disease during childbirth.
analysis: 1) Of the 240 pregnancy-combined neo-coronavirus infections in Washington state, 1/11 developed severe or critical conditions, 1/10 were hospitalized for neo-crown pneumonia, 1/80 died; 3.5 times as many adults of the same age in Washington state (10.0% vs 2.8%, compared to RR 3.5, 95% CI 2.3 to 5.3); 3) Pregnant women hospitalized for respiratory diseases are more likely to have common diseases or potential diseases, including asthma, hypertension, type 2 diabetes, autoimmune diseases and type III obesity; The mortality rate for pregnant women was 13.6 times higher than that of pregnant women of the same age (95% CI 2.7-43.6), with an absolute difference of 1.2% (95% CI 0.3-2.6); The rate of premature birth of pregnant women with critical neo-crown pneumonia was significantly higher than that of pregnant women recovering from neo-crown pneumonia (severe/critical re-corona pneumonia vs mild neo-crown pneumonia: 45.4% vs 5.2%, p.lt;0.001).
washington state, the hospitalization and mortality rates of new crown pneumonia among pregnant women are significantly higher than among their peers.
this data show that pregnant women are significantly more likely to develop severe or critical cases after contracting the new coronavirus, as well as death and premature birth, compared to adults who are not pregnant.