Evidence of swine flu risk to pregnant women rises

Nurses COVID

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Evidence of swine flu risk to pregnant women rises; experts urge early treatment

http://www.google.com/hostednews/canadianpress/article/ALeqM5jiEhxWUiH_XUQapgsZTTYelXFQKw

Remember that the CDC is now recommending special considerations for pregnant HCW. Most hospitals and health care facilities have not yet implemented those guidelines. They might not if no one mentions this to Risk Management. Feel free to copy this article and show it to RM with the CDC guidelines. I am going to be doing this also.

If you are pregnant and you get sick, take the Tamiflu. It is safer than not taking it.

First a link to the gudelines, then the article:

http://www.cdc.gov/h1n1flu/guidance/pregnant-hcw-educators.htm

There are mounting and troubling signs that swine flu and pregnancy don't mix well.

Six pregnant women in Manitoba are reportedly on ventilators because they are severely ill with the virus.

And at least two pregnant women in the United States have died of swine flu complications after delivering babies by C-section.

A pregnant teenager in the Dominican Republic died, as did a pregnant woman in Scotland.

A woman in St. Theresa Point, a First Nations community in Manitoba, miscarried after contracting swine flu.

Humankind's relationship with the new swine H1N1 virus is still in its infancy. But people who've studied the issue of pregnancy during flu pandemics don't like the signs they are seeing. Dr. Denise Jamieson, an obstetrician-gynecologist with the U.S. Centers for Disease Control's division of reproductive health, says she finds the evidence to date "very unsettling."

"I am concerned about this," Jamieson said in an interview from Atlanta.

"There does seem to be increased severity in pregnancy. We don't have hard and fast numbers but there are enough reports that are concerning."

Data released by the CDC last month said at that point, 17 per cent of Americans hospitalized for severe swine flu infections were pregnant women.

A report a couple of weeks back in the World Health Organization's journal, Weekly Epidemiologic Record, noted of 30 swine flu patients hospitalized in California, five were pregnant women. Of those, two developed severe complications - spontaneous abortion and premature rupture of membranes.

...the fatality rate was higher in pregnant women during the 1918 and 1957 pandemics, though not the milder pandemic of 1968.

"If we base it on what we know of the 1918, 1957 pandemics, what we know about pre-existing antibody levels to swine influenza in the population, based on that I would say for this particular virus, pregnant women may suffer more serious consequences, especially in the third trimester," she said.

"And they should probably seek care early if they have influenza-like illness."

Studies done after the disastrous 1918 Spanish flu - which took its heaviest toll on young adults - showed astonishing death rates among pregnant women, said Dr. Michael Osterholm, an infectious diseases expert at the University of Minnesota.

Skowronski's review paper suggests there were also very high rates of spontaneous abortions during that pandemic - 26 per cent in pregnant women who became infected and 52 per cent among those who went on to develop pneumonia from their infection.

Osterholm explained pregnancy is a precarious state for a woman from an immunological point of view. In order that the mother's body does not reject the fetus, part of the immune system has to be effectively dialled down.

Other factors are also believed to come into play, including reduced lung capacity, Jamieson added.

She said that while the CDC doesn't yet have firm numbers, they are hearing that some pregnant women are reluctant to take antiviral drugs when they are diagnosed with swine flu. In some cases, their physicians share the reluctance.

Jamieson said given the risk swine flu poses to pregnant women, any who feel they may have contracted it should seek care quickly and should tell their doctor about potential exposures to people who had the virus. And they should take the antiviral drugs, she said.

"The message we're trying to get out is: 'Don't delay. If you suspect influenza, initiate antiviral therapy appropriately even before you get the testing back," Jamieson said.

"We definitely feel like in a situation like this, the benefits outweigh the risks of giving antiviral medication."

I am to see my Dr. tomorrow I presented to the ER today with low grade fever, very sore throat, tightness in chest, heavy cough, bronchospasms, mild emesis (due to the cough) all symptoms lasting approximately one week and was discharged home with a script for zofran and dx: gastroenteritis I happen to be 17 weeks pregnant with my 3rd. Needless to say I do not have an easy feeling about this. I was given a chest x-ray to rule out pneumonia and blood was drawn but all I could get is "hmm wbc elevated" " your pregnant I can't give you anything except these fluids. go home. you have a stomach bug" what? Good to know we are trying to prevent the spread of these symptoms. Without my knowledge in medicine I wouldn't think anything of going to the grocery store or my families house which would spread this even more. I am not saying I have swine flu but is it not possible with my symptoms?

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I am to see my Dr. tomorrow I presented to the ER today with low grade fever, very sore throat, tightness in chest, heavy cough, bronchospasms, mild emesis (due to the cough) all symptoms lasting approximately one week and was discharged home with a script for zofran and dx: gastroenteritis I happen to be 17 weeks pregnant with my 3rd. Needless to say I do not have an easy feeling about this. I was given a chest x-ray to rule out pneumonia and blood was drawn but all I could get is "hmm wbc elevated" " your pregnant I can't give you anything except these fluids. go home. you have a stomach bug" what? Good to know we are trying to prevent the spread of these symptoms. Without my knowledge in medicine I wouldn't think anything of going to the grocery store or my families house which would spread this even more. I am not saying I have swine flu but is it not possible with my symptoms?

I am glad that you are going to see your own doctor. Would that be your OB doc?

Were you also tested for swine flu while at the ER? Perhaps you were, but tested negative.

It is good that you are informed in case it is influenza, and your symptoms get worse. While you may well have gastroenteritis, considering that you also have ILI symptoms, and an elevated WBC, I can see why you would be concerned. As you know, it is not our place to diagnose here.

You can share this info with your doc if you think that it will help.

http://www.cdc.gov/h1n1flu/clinician_pregnant.htm

I hope that you have an uneventful recovery, and a safe delivery later in your pregnancy. Good luck to you.

Specializes in Too many to list.

United Arab Emirates

http://archive.gulfnews.com/nation/Health/10335288.html

A pregnant 25-year-old Emirati woman has been diagnosed with H1N1 swine flu virus and is currently in a medicated coma at Welcare Hospital.

The woman, who is five-and-a-half-months pregnant, is also suffering from pneumonia as a result of the flu and has a history of severe asthma.

"Doctors at Welcare have told us that it's a 50:50 chance that she might lose the baby; they say that it is in critical but stable condition," her brother Mohammad told Gulf News.

The family is blaming Dubai Hospital for the severity of her condition. "How could they let a swine flu case slip through like that? Government hospitals are the ones concentrating on swine flu and they just ignored my sister's condition," says Mohammad.

"I took my sister to Dubai Hospital Emergency Room on Monday [July 13]. She was complaining that she was feeling weak, nauseous and had a fever. We were worried about the baby as this is her first pregnancy," says Mohammad.

"We were made to wait for almost an hour until her husband yelled at them and made a scene. A doctor examined her and gave her an injection. No other medication was given, and she was discharged."

"The next day she was feeling even worse and had a fever of about 41 degrees Celsius. We took her back to Dubai Hospital Emergency Room, where they made her sit in a wheelchair for almost an hour with no doctor or nurse giving her any attention, even when she was vomiting."

"We decided to leave the hospital as she wasn't getting any care there; nobody even stopped us or asked us where we were going. We took her to nearby Al Baraha Hospital. They were very fast and got her on a [intravenous] drip right away and had a doctor look in on her every 10 minutes. They told us that they wanted to admit her for 72-hour observation, but her husband said if she needed to be admitted then he would have her admitted to Welcare Hospital. They made us sign a waiver that we were discharging her against doctor's orders."

A spokesperson for Dubai Hospital said: "The hospital staff is well equipped to deal with Swine flu cases and we follow WHO guidelines and protocol. In this specific case, the patient visited Dubai hospital ER section on July 13, at 6.40pm. She was seen by a nurse at 7.10pm and by the doctor at 7.35pm. Her condition was stable and her main complaint was nausea and vomiting, which are common symptoms in pregnancy. She had no previous history of travel. She refused to undergo tests such as the blood count test. She was given a prescription but left without taking it with her. The next day her symptoms became worse, however she did not go to see the doctor."

(hat tip flutrackers/feedme)

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Specializes in OB, HH, ADMIN, IC, ED, QI.

Indigogirl: Re: Post # 62

It seems that there's hesitation about the 5 months pregnant Emitati woman going back again to Dubai Hospital (a "government hospital"), and I certainly don't blame her. There may be a 2 tier system there, with Welcare hospital being more exclusive.....

I wonder where her husband was?

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Indigogirl: Re: Post # 62

It seems that there's hesitation about the 5 months pregnant Emitati woman going back again to Dubai Hospital (a "government hospital"), and I certainly don't blame her. There may be a 2 tier system there, with Welcare hospital being more exclusive.....

I wonder where her husband was?

It's a confusing story. I don't know anything about their health care system or what really happened except the result. She's in a medically induced coma like so many others at this time.

I would think that there would be a great deal of concern in any ER where a pregnant woman shows up with a history of asthma during this pandemic. In addition, it should be well known that this virus frequently causes GI symptoms in adults as well as in children.

Things are very different now, and pregnant woman coming in with vomiting should not be dismissed without a high index of suspicion that this could be swine flu. If anyone merits a test for swine flu, it is definitely them. Even if they test negative, I would be worried as it quite apparent that the rapid flu tests are not that reliable.

We are losing too many pregnant women everywhere to this virus.

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Marin County, California

http://abclocal.go.com/kgo/story?section=news/local/north_bay&id=6939507&rss=rss-kgo-article-6939507

The photo of husband and wife together is so beautiful. What a tragedy it is to lose so many young mothers...

ABC7 News has confirmed that one of the people who died of the H1N1 flu this spring was a pregnant woman from Marin County and her family claims local health authorities were ill prepared to save her life.

The family has kept a low profile since 33-year-old Jaime Norman died, but with the national Centers for Disease Control and Prevention warnings about the H1N1 virus, they have decided to speak out.

Norman went into the hospital 29 weeks pregnant with flu symptoms -- she never came out. But doctors were able to save her baby.

Her baby, Jack, was born nearly two months premature. She held him, her first and only child, just once before she died of the swine flu.

"She was at least conscious enough that to know that they had put him on her stomach and touch the hands so there was some contact for about half an hour," Norman's husband Eric Sheldon said.

Norman was Marin County's first swine flu death and her family has questions about whether health care workers were prepared to treat her illness.

"Totally the lab had not any experience in H1N1, they thought it was H1N3," Norman's mother Barbara Norman said.

Norman checked into the emergency room at Marin General Hospital. She was diagnosed with pneumonia and ultimately swine flu.

"I can't be angry because they were fairly out of the loop where most of the cases were happening," Barbara Norman said.

CDC researchers said Wednesday the swine flu has been especially devastating to pregnant women. Expectant mothers who catch the virus have a higher risk of serious illness and death. Fifteen women in the country died of swine flu between April and June; it is unknown how many more, like Norman, have died since then.

After being born so many months early, baby Jack is doing well and expected to be released from Alta Bates Hospital in Berkeley in about three weeks.

His father is looking forward to it, but with sadness.

"I believe when Jack does get home from the hospital that's when it's going to really hit home that I'm by myself," Sheldon said.

(hat tip PFI/howmanyday)

I did see my own general practice doctor and for right now they are going with a bad case of bronchitis. So far as I know the baby is tolerating everything fine. I am on a z-pack, albuteral inhaler, and tussin with codeine. Seems to be helping. I appreciate your concern. My biggest concern was the lax attitude of the doctor. With the symptoms presented and the current situation I was always taught to treat the worst and eliminate as you can. That way you cover all bases. I was surprised considering the hospital I went to (it isn't a small one). I am staying informed with help from great people like you thank you.

Also wanted to tell you a quick funny from my doctor. She looked at me and my symptoms and looked at the discharge papers from the hospital and said "hmmm well for this particular stomach bug I am going to prescribe an inhaler and a z-pack and something with codeine. You have to watch this particular type of stomach bug because it can really settle in the lungs and turn into pneumonia. It is a rare, (haha) very rare type only seen at ummm this hospital." She was glad I came to her as soon as possible but was not impressed with the ER I went to.

Specializes in Too many to list.

Thank you for updating us. I hope that you are feeling better soon. I like your doc.

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New Zealand

Swine flu victim first health worker to die

Actually she is not the first. There was that GP in the UK not long ago.

We don't know if she was pregnant but her death may have been pregnancy related so I will leave this here for now.

http://www.stuff.co.nz/national/health/2705831/Swine-flu-victim-first-health-worker-to-die

The 39-year-old woman who died of swine flu in Wellington Hospital this week was a front-line health worker at Hutt Hospital, officials have confirmed.

The woman understood to have been a nurse in the children's ward is believed to be the first health worker to die from the virus in New Zealand.

Her death from a rare complication on Monday, after 11 days in intensive care, is the 13th to be officially recorded.

The coroner is investigating another 20 suspected deaths from the virus.

The woman had suffered a miscarriage within the previous two months. Pregnancy is a known risk factor for viral complications. However, it is not known whether she had the virus at the time she miscarried.

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Paraguay

http://www.flutrackers.com/forum/showpost.php?p=274190&postcount=3

Influenza A and killed 13 people in Alto ParanĂ¡

Severe acute respiratory infection (IRAG) and killed 13 people in the year in the Upper ParanĂ¡. Two of the victims were pregnant women. Furthermore, the death of a baby a little over a year because of influenza A H1N1.

Similarly, many patients with flu-like paintings are in the hospital "Sentinel", Regional Hospital of Ciudad del Este. Of the 74 authorized beds, 34 are occupied by people who have pictures of respiratory infections.

The amount listed, four remain in Intensive Care Unit (ICU), two adults and two children.

According to the Tenth Region of Health, there are 751 in Alto ParanĂ¡ IRAG notifications, 548 cases remain suspicious of Influenza A H1N1 and five laboratory confirmed.

In addition, 13 were reported dead because of IRAG, including two pregnant women.

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