Your Expert Witness Issue No. 59

Page 38

More women take up COVID vaccination in pregnancy [

DATA PUBLISHED by the UK Health Security Agency shows that, in August, 22% of women who gave birth were vaccinated against COVID. That figure has been steadily increasing since April, when the Joint Committee on Vaccination and Immunisation advised all pregnant women should be offered two vaccine doses at the same time as the rest of the population. The figures also show uptake in the most deprived areas and for those from certain ethnic minority communities is lower than for

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other areas or ethnicities, but follows a similar pattern to the uptake figures for those groups in the general population. That means 5.5% of black women and 7.8% of women from the most deprived areas were being vaccinated. Of those pregnant women in hospital with symptomatic COVID-19, 98% are unvaccinated. Around one in five women who are hospitalised with the virus need to be delivered preterm to help them recover and one in five of their babies need care in the neonatal unit. The Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists strongly recommends pregnant women to get vaccinated against COVID-19, as the best way to protect themselves and their babies from the virus. Its president Dr Edward Morris said: “This important report is the first detailed analysis of COVID-19 vaccine coverage in women giving birth in the UK and provides further reassuring evidence that vaccinated women have no increased risk of having a stillbirth or low birthweight baby. “The evidence reinforces our strong recommendation that getting vaccinated before or during pregnancy is the best way to protect against the known harms of developing COVID-19 while pregnant, including admission to intensive care and premature birth. “We are concerned that women of black ethnicity and those living in the most deprived areas in England were least likely to have been vaccinated before they gave birth. Efforts must be strengthened to support and encourage these groups – who are already at the highest risk of adverse pregnancy outcomes – to accept the offer of vaccination.” q


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Articles inside

What is the link between trauma and fibromyalgia?

7min
pages 54-55

Debate rages around diagnosis of PTSD

2min
pages 51-52

Book will celebrate the work of hand surgeons

2min
page 50

Record numbers await heart tests, BHF finds

2min
pages 47-48

What are the causes and treatments of venous thrombosis in the arm?

4min
pages 45-46

Podiatry hails blueprint for future

2min
page 44

Nerve injuries after total hip replacement

4min
pages 41-42

Report features findings on COVID-19 effect on joint replacements

2min
page 43

More women take up COVID vaccination in pregnancy

1min
page 38

Pandemic drives increase in antibiotic prescribing by dentists

2min
pages 33-36

What can a lost tooth cost?

3min
page 32

Failings highlight need for training for medical expert witnesses

3min
pages 27-28

Noise-induced hearing loss: claims are on the increase

3min
page 31

Report quantifies excess deaths due to Emergency Department ‘crowding’

2min
page 26

Our A to Z guide to the websites of some of the country’s leading expert witnesses.

5min
pages 21-24

Oil disputes: the ins and outs of hedging

3min
page 19

Judgement clarifies law on construction payment notices

3min
page 18

The Fire Safety Act 2021: what your client needs to know

1min
page 20

Why expert determination is a fitting alternative to litigation

3min
page 17

Fitness for prison: it’s not as straightforward a decision as it seems

4min
page 12

Judge calls for inquiry into CPS expert witness

2min
page 8

How can expert witnesses support the courts in their response to the pandemic?

5min
pages 15-16

The CPR and CrimPR rules for experts really do matter

5min
page 11
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