Evidence of swine flu risk to pregnant women rises

Nurses COVID

Published

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."

Specializes in Too many to list.

Five Pregnant Women in ICU in Bay Area

http://cbs5.com/video/[email protected]

If this is what is happening in late June, what can we expect this fall?

Dr. Mulvihill did not get her facts staight about the Tamiflu resistant case in Denmark. The case was female.

(hat tip PFI/heddie)

http://cbs5.com/health/h1n1.flu.cluster.2.1064748.html

...at least five pregnant women have been hospitalized in Bay Area intensive care units due to complications of the H1N1 swine flu.

Sources said two of the five women are no longer in ICU, but they remained hospitalized. All the fetuses appeared to be fine, the sources indicated.

This may be the first reported cluster of pregnant women infected with H1N1 in the country. One obstetrician who was consulted on all five cases told CBS 5 that he had never seen anything like this before.

All the pregnant women are or were in their early third trimester. Some required intubation or help breathing, sources said.

Some of these women were perfectly healthy, while others had underlying health conditions. While the doctor could not divulge what other health conditions these pregnant women had, the Centers for Disease Control said respiratory conditions such as allergies or asthma or even heart disease, may put a person at a higher risk.

The CDC and the World Health Organization also warned that pregnancy itself may be a risk factor for contracting H1N1.

CDC officials said they don't know why pregnant women may be at a higher risk for contracting swine flu or for complications following a swine flu infection. However, pregnant women, in general, have lowered immune systems.

The doctor interviewed by CBS 5 believes that with infected pregnant women who are in their third trimester, the enlarging fetus in the uterus may be pushing up and against a woman's diaphragm to such a degree, that she can no longer breathe as deeply, and may be at higher risk for pneumonia.

All public health officials and experts agree: if you are pregnant, and experience symptoms, do not panic; do not rush the emergency room or your doctor's office. Instead, call your doctor, describe your symptoms and ask whether you need to be tested.

The symptoms are fever, cough, sore throat, body aches, headaches, chills and fatigue and sometimes diarrhea and vomiting.

The CDC said many pregnant women who are infected with H1N1 will not have a problem. However, for some, the illness might progress quickly and then, may be complicated by secondary bacteria infections, most likely pneumonia.

As for treatment, certain antiviral medications may help. Tamiflu and Relenza are believed safe for use in pregnant and breast feeding women.

Specializes in Too many to list.

Argentina

http://translate.google.com/translate?js=n&prev=_t&hl=en&ie=UTF-8&u=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.infobae.com%2Fcontenidos%2F457605-101275-0-Una-nueva-víctima-fatal-la-influenza-A-ya-son-34-las-muertes&sl=es&tl=en&history_state0=

I have to admit that this is an awful translation, but I suffered through it. I think that the pregnant teacher was on the faculty of this dental school.

The three deaths in the Italian Hospital joined the other two officially announced that the government medical authorities in the province of Santa Fe and the two people who today confirmed the dean of the Faculty of Dentistry, UBA, María Beatriz Guglielmoti in C5N.

The official said that in education a student and a teacher who was pregnant, were killed in the last few hours due to influenza A.

(hat tip flutrackers/shiloh)

Specializes in Too many to list.

Costa Rica

http://insidecostarica.com/dailynews/2009/july/06/cr02.htm

Three pregnant women are in the San Juan de Dios hospital, in San José, infected with the AH1N1 flu virus, according to the ministerio de Salud. One is intensive care suffering from pneumonia.

Salud officials say the woman is in her 20th week of gestation and admitted to hospital last week, while the others are in isolation.

Dr. Ana Morice, viceministra de Salud, expalined that the women are in the high risk group, similar to those who suffer from diabetes, chronic pulmonary and smokers.

Specializes in critical care: trauma/oncology/burns.

I work in a hospital in Texas and currently a young women who had an emergent c-section, diagnosed with AH1N1, is currently on high frequency ossillating ventilation - HFOV -and NO2. Not sure how the baby is doing, but her prognosis is grim

Specializes in Too many to list.

Thank you for that information.

Yes, if they have to do an emergency c-section, the prognosis is most likely very dismal. There have been two other emergency C-sections in Texas secondary to swine flu. Neither of the women survived.

Specializes in Too many to list.

Paraguay

http://www.diariovanguardia.com.py/detalle_articulo.php?id_contenido=8963

Una mujer embarazada, de 20 años de edad, sería la cuarta víctima de la influenza A H1N1. La misma falleció anoche en el hospital de Itauguá. El doctor Diego Gamarra, director de Salud, indicó que en las próximas horas se confirmaría la versión, una vez que se tenga el informe laboratorial sobre la causa del fallecimiento de la mujer.

Ante la gravedad, los médicos procedieron a una cesárea para sacarle la criatura que se encuentra en observación en terapia intensiva. La joven trabajaba como empleada doméstica de una familia, algunos de cuyos integrantes dieron positivo a la influenza.

Rough translation provided by Monotreme over at PFI.

"A 20 year old pregnant woman was the fourth person in Paraguay to die of the new H1N1. She died last night in a hospital in Itaguá. Her child was delivered by Caesarean section before she died."

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Argentina

http://www.flutrackers.com/forum/showpost.php?p=260795&postcount=1

Kudos to all of the flu forums for providing all of the translated material in this thread. It is very time consuming to search out and translate. I am very grateful.

Source: http://www.lanacion.com.ar/nota.asp?...12921&toi=6256

(Machine translation)

A woman of 26 years, that days back gave birth to a baby in perfect condition, passed away last night because of the influenza To in the Iturraspe Hospital of the city of San Francisco, to 210 kilometers of the Cordovan capital. With this decease, they add the 56 deaths confirmed before the advance of the epidemic in the country.

The young person is the first fatal victim of virus A/H1N1 in Cordova and passed away east Saturday around the 21 after remaining boarding school about 20 days, needed the director that welfare center, Mario Vignolo.

"One week ago that the diagnosis in the Malbrán Institute had been confirmed", he informed.

The patient had given birth to a baby by Caesarean days in a private clinic and later she was derived to the Iturraspe Hospital, where she passed away.

The girl new born does not have sequels of the disease of her mother and "she is either, or she heals, without no complication", ratified Vignolo.

http://www.flutrackers.com/forum/showpost.php?p=260882&postcount=2

http://news.google.ca/news?ned=es_ar...=all&scoring=n

The last fatal case occurred in Iturraspe Hospital in Cordoba city of San Francisco. The youngest of 26 years died a few weeks after being placed and give birth to a bebe.

A woman of 26 years became the first fatal case of swine flu in the province of Cordoba, with this death and 56 people were killed across the country as a result of this disease, according to official figures.

The person died yesterday, about 21:00, at the Hospital of the city Iturraspe cordobesa San Francisco, a few weeks after being placed and give birth to a bebe.

"The girl suffered complications after her caesarean section and required mechanical respiration, unfortunately could not escape and died of bilateral pneumonia," said the director of the Hospital Iturraspe Mario Vignolo, told Cadena 3.

Diagnosis of swine influenza in the deceased patient had been confirmed last Tuesday by the Institute Malbrán and for the moment, it is unknown how they are spread.

"This woman was admitted with this pregnancy to term, but with a flu-like box. When subjected to a caesarean section and respiratory complication was a bilateral pneumonia," he said.

The specialist said that "the baby is well, is with his grandparents, was two days in neonatology, but without complications."

"Pregnant women, then consider why they are far more vulnerable to this condition. They are a risk group and are doing all the swabs that are flu-like paintings," he explained.

Specializes in Too many to list.

Palm Beach County, Florida

http://www.palmbeachpost.com/business/content/business/epaper/2009/07/10/0710swineflu.html

I do not ever recall hearing about several pregnant women dying from seasonal flu. I am sure that it does happen because any kind of influenza can kill but, if it happened this often, surely we would have heard about it.

There were several early reports on this woman's death in which they gave no details other than sex and age. They seemed to be very reluctant to divulge the fact that she was pregnant. So, this was an emergency C-section, perhaps? They don't say...

She died, but her baby survived.

That's all public health officials will say about a pregnant woman who, at 25, became Palm Beach County's first swine flu-associated fatality and the state's seventh.

The young mother died June 27, the Florida Department of Health said Thursday. The announcement came on a day when President Obama told state leaders at a flu preparedness summit to plan for a widespread outbreak this fall.

While the novel H1N1 flu strain is considered mild as influenza goes, it can cause serious and life-threatening complications for some.

It has the potential to seriously burden the health system if its growth continues, Hopkins stressed.

"The vast majority of people infected with this virus will do just fine. A few days of feeling rotten, and then they get better on their own," he said. "But let's just say one in 1,000 who gets infected gets sick enough to be hospitalized. If you have a million infected people, you have 1,000 hospitalized, and all of a sudden it begins to look like a big deal."

The state is tracking details of the confirmed cases. Its data suggest that 55 of those infected were health care workers and 17 were pregnant women.

It's unclear why pregnant women seem to develop more serious complications from the illness.

In May, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta, in a weekly journal, published the case histories of three pregnant women, suggesting that the changes to a woman's body that occur with pregnancy - including changes in her heart, lungs and immune systems - were what made the women vulnerable.

The CDC has recommended that pregnant women be given Tamiflu and eventually a vaccine when one becomes available.

(hat tip flutrackers/thebes)

Specializes in Too many to list.

Peru

http://www.flutrackers.com/forum/showpost.php?p=264645&postcount=4

This is a translation. Sadly, it appears that neither mother nor baby survived.

She was a teacher. Because the CDC has made specific recommendations for women in education as well as in health care, it appears that they recognize that some occupations are going to put pregnant women more at risk for being exposed to influenza on the job. This unfortunate woman is not the first teacher to die of swine flu since the pandemic started.

Fourth victim was a teacher of children

Woman with six months' gestation died in the Maria Auxiliadora.

A professor of early education and child of six months in the womb who had joined the list of victims of fatal influenza AH1N1 in our country. Alejandrina Lopez Magali Lopez, 27 years, died yesterday morning at the Maria Auxiliadora Hospital, San Juan de Miraflores.

She was hospitalized on Tuesday with a picture of pneumonia. Her husband Rafael Huacho ensures that doctors recently told him the diagnosis of influenza when he died. Huacho is outraged by the lack of information received in hospital and especially the loss of his son.

Magali Lopez taught about 31 children between 3 and 4 years at school Our Lady of Reconciliation, located in Pamplona Alta, San Juan de Miraflores. Counted according to a family, taught until Friday, the day began to feel ill. Carlos Contreras, health director of the NGO Solidarity Walk-nest-promoter said that his institution will tour the area today to check the health of minors.

Specializes in Too many to list.

Costa Rica

http://insidecostarica.com/dailynews/2009/july/12/cr02.htm

A pregnant woman who was carrying twins died Saturday morning from the AH1N1 flu virus, becoming the fifth death from the virus since it was it was first reported in Costa Rica on April 24.

The 25 year old woman, who was in her fifth month of gestation, died at 1:30pm Saturday at the Unidad de Cuidados Intensivos (intenside care unit) of the hospital San Juan de Dios (HSJD).

The ministerio de Salud reports that the two fetuses died hours before the woman succummed to the virus.

The ministra de Salud, María Luisa Ávila, explained that the woman also suffered from obesity.

"She got all the medical attention and follow up at the hospital, but due to her pregnancy and obesity, they added to the complications and high risk for patients with the virus", said Ávila.

The woman's husband said that his wife had had a high fever for five days continuous until he took her to the Solón Núñez clinic on June 2 when she was barely able to breathe. Roberto Gaitán Muñoz said that the same day she was transferred to the HSJD, where she was kept in isolation in the intensive care unit.

Salud officials say the woman died from Septic shock, a serious medical condition caused by decreased tissue perfusion and oxygen delivery as a result of infection and sepsis, related to her AH1N1 viral infection.

Peru

http://www.flutrackers.com/forum/showpost.php?p=264645&postcount=4

This is a translation. Sadly, it appears that neither mother nor baby survived.

She was a teacher. Because the CDC has made specific recommendations for women in education as well as in health care, it appears that they recognize that some occupations are going to put pregnant women more at risk for being exposed to influenza on the job. This unfortunate woman is not the first teacher to die of swine flu since the pandemic started.

Yes, it is a little hard to follow the translation. I mean it looks like it says the father is more upset about the death of the fetus than the mother. But perhaps I miss understand because the translation is so bad.

Why is the news coverage about this South American outbreak so anemic? It sounds as if they are having a ****of a time down there. Everything piece of info about what is going on down that I have seen has been posted on this site. Not a WORD in my local newspaper or the WSJ, both of which I read cover to cover just about everyday. Wall to wall MJ coverage for over a week and not a word about all these pregnant women and children dying down there. OMG!
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