Author: Lucas, D. N.; Bamber, J. H.
Title: Pandemics and maternal health: the indirect effects of COVIDâ€19 Cord-id: 8sydx2su Document date: 2021_3_7
ID: 8sydx2su
Snippet: Infectious diseases can directly affect women and men differently. During the COVIDâ€19 pandemic, higher case fatality rates have been observed in men in most countries. There is growing evidence, however, that while organisational changes to healthcare delivery have occurred to protect those vulnerable to the virus (staff and patients), these may lead to indirect, potentially harmful consequences, particularly to vulnerable groups including pregnant women. These encompass reduced access to ant
Document: Infectious diseases can directly affect women and men differently. During the COVIDâ€19 pandemic, higher case fatality rates have been observed in men in most countries. There is growing evidence, however, that while organisational changes to healthcare delivery have occurred to protect those vulnerable to the virus (staff and patients), these may lead to indirect, potentially harmful consequences, particularly to vulnerable groups including pregnant women. These encompass reduced access to antenatal and postnatal care, with a lack of inâ€person clinics impacting the ability to screen for physical, psychological and social issues such as elevated blood pressure, mental health issues and sexâ€based violence. Indirect consequences also encompass a lack of equity when considering the inclusion of pregnant women in COVIDâ€19 research and their absence from vaccine trials, leading to a lack of safety data for breastfeeding and pregnant women. The riskâ€benefit analysis of these changes to healthcare delivery remains to be fully evaluated, but the battle against COVIDâ€19 cannot come at the expense of losing existing quality standards in other areas of healthcare, especially for maternal health.
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