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."

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Northland, Kansas

http://www.kmbc.com/health/21139199/detail.html

A 31-year-old Northland woman who is believed to have contracted the H1N1 flu died Monday from complications a month after giving birth.

Travis and Angela Stuteville

Angela Stuteville never got to hold her baby.

She came down with flu symptoms shortly before the birth of her son, Jaxson, on Aug. 28.

The infant was put in isolation as a precaution and Stuteville's condition grew worse. She was put on a ventilator while doctors induced a coma.

She developed acute respiratory distress syndrome, which has a high mortality rate and is a condition that can be brought about by the H1N1 virus.

Stuteville never came out of the coma. Though she saw her son briefly, she never got to touch him.

"The nurses were upset that Angie didn't get to see the baby, so they brought the baby up the night before the crash so she could spend about 10 minutes and actually see him," husband Travis Stuteville told KMBC.

Jaxson has no medical problems from exposure to the illness.

The couple has two children, including Jaxson.

"Now we just pick up the pieces, try to resume life and live through her kids, it's all I can do," Stuteville said.

Stuteville is a Kansas City police officer. He said his fellow officers donated more than 80 sick days so that he could spend more time at the hospital with his wife and take care of his children.

If you'd like to help the family with medical expenses, donations can be sent to the Jaxson Stuteville Fund at any Bank of America branch.

(hat tip pfi/aurora)

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Update on Post #100

http://www.baynews9.com/content/36/2009/9/29/526996.html

RIP, Valerie Post.

A Citrus County woman who was pregnant when she contracted swine flu has died.

Valerie Post, 24, was seven months pregnant when she was diagnosed with the H1N1 virus, or swine flu on Aug 7.

An emergency C-section was performed the same day. Post's baby, Nora, is healthy.

Post has another daughter with her husband Bryan, and that girl, named Trinity, also tested positive for swine flu but has since recovered.

(hat tip FlaMedic)

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UPDATE on Post #137

http://www.wpbf.com/health/21149320/detail.html

A 27-year-old woman who lost her baby while she was in a medically induced coma after being diagnosed with swine flu while pregnant was discharged from the hospital Tuesday.

"I remember being sick, just with a little cold what I thought it was, and being sick all week and then going to the hospital and then after that I don't remember," Opdyke said.

Opdyke was six months pregnant when she was admitted to Wellington Regional Medical Center on July 3. Doctors were forced to deliver Opdyke's daughter prematurely, but baby Parker Christine did not survive.

Opdyke received weeks of physical therapy at Kindred Hospital. But now that's all behind her.

(hat tip flutrackers/Rwilmer)

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Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam

http://crofsblogs.typepad.com/h5n1/2009/09/vietnam-15-deaths.html

The Health Ministry on Tuesday confirmed the 15th influenza A death in the country and the 13th in just one month.

A 21-year-old woman, whose name has not been released, died Sunday at the Tu Du hospital in Ho Chi Minh City. She was 7.5 months pregnant.

She is the second pregnant woman to die of the virus. The first one was reported last Friday in the Central Highlands' Dak Lak Province.

The Pasteur Institute in HCMC last Wednesday confirmed that the woman had tested positive for the H1N1 virus, also known as swine flu.

The woman was hospitalized in Can Gio District Hospital in Ho Chi Minh City last Tuesday with cough and fever and was diagnosed with pneumonia.

She was then transferred to the Tu Du Hospital the same day and diagnosed further with heart failure. From there she was taken to the HCMC Heart Institute, where she was assisted with a respirator and treated with tamiflu, but she did not respond to treatment.

The baby also died as the embryo was still too small and doctors couldn't take it out, Dr. Phan Van Nghiem from the city Health Department was quoted by the newswire Vnexpress as saying on Tuesday.

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Tamaulipas, Mexico

http://www.flutrackers.com/forum/showpost.php?p=300497&postcount=34

Influenza virus AH1N1 claimed their tenth fatality in Tamaulipas to yesterday confirmed the death of a pregnant woman in the hospital Alfredo Pumarejo Matamoros.

The chief of epidemiology in the state, Dr. Alfredo Rodríguez Trujillo, said the patient died of pneumonic problems arising from influenza.

This case, he said, what we have stigmatized as a forensic case, since the patient came to hospital and prior to notice improvement he was discharged, although we can not confirm that his death was medical malpractice.

However, the event follows a research analyst where he determines whether or not acted negligently.

The state lab results confirmed that tests performed after the death of the woman was due to influenza AH1N1.

"Although this patient was about 38 weeks pregnant, her death was not derivdos problems of his state, but pneumonic problems caused by the virus," he said.

In Matamoros, he said, will have registered 85 cases confirmed this type of influenza, so it is necessary to continue to carry out preventive measures, as described above.

Trujillo Rodriguez, the woman said she underwent a cesarean section, her son died a few hours old, but was ruled out as carrying the virus.

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My daughter is six months pregnant and just saw her doctor. She was diagnosed with an upper respiratory infection and put on antibiotics. They swabbed her nose to check for swine flu and it came up negative. I am watching her very closely for any additional symptoms of the flu. Is it ever possible that H1N1 ever presents without fever being present? The child of my daughters manager had H1N1. My daughter contracted the URI shortly thereafter although her manager never had any symptoms of the flu.

I am so worried for my daughter right now. We are planning on getting her vaccinated as soon as the shots are available in this neck of the woods. (We are in Pasco County, Florida...Tampa Bay area).

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Is it ever possible that H1N1 ever presents without fever being present?

Yes, this has been occurring in some cases since the Mexican outbreak.

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/08/11/health/11docs.html?pagewanted=1&_r=2&ref=world

Dr. Wenzel, a former president of the International Society for Infectious Diseases, said he had observed a broad spectrum of illness from human swine influenza: people who experienced few or no symptoms to those who rapidly developed complications and died.

The standard definition of influenza includes a fever. But an odd feature of the new virus is the lack of fever in a significant proportion of documented cases, even after some patients become seriously ill. In Chile, it was about half, in Mexico City about a third and elsewhere, less, Dr. Wenzel said. Lack of fever has been noted by other observers in several Canadian cases.

Analysis of data from specimens yet to be tested may shed light on how often infected individuals who have no fever spread the virus.

Epidemiologists stress the need for rigorous methodology to produce the solid data that is crucial for planning. For example, a need exists to account for the several-week delay that can occur between the onset of symptoms and death in influenza and other illnesses. Failure to take that time lag into account can seriously underestimate the death rate, depending on when in the course of the pandemic the information is obtained.

So absence of fever among substantial proportions of patients, when fever is specified in the definition, can cause serious underestimation of case totals.

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Dong Nai Province, Vietnam

http://www.thanhniennews.com/healthy/?catid=8&newsid=52820

Dong Nai Province on Tuesday recorded the nation's sixteenth death swine flu death as the epidemic spread to 58 of its 62 provinces and cities.

The Ministry of Health reported Wednesday that the latest victim, a 16-year-old pregnant teenager, was admitted to the general hospital in the southern province on Sunday with symptoms like respiratory problems and fever.

The hospital's doctors treated her with antiviral drug Tamiflu and sent her to Ho Chi Minh City-based Cho Ray Hospital the following day.

As she had already developed critical pneumonia and respiratory failure, doctors from Cho Ray Hospital performed emergency surgery to take out her 39-week-old baby, who is now in good health, the ministry said.

The mother, whose name has not been released, was given Tamiflu after the surgery, but succumbed on Tuesday night. She is the third pregnant woman to die of swine flu in Vietnam so far.

The HCMC Pasteur Institute later confirmed she had tested positive for influenza A (H1N1) virus, listing her as the third pregnant woman to die after swine flu so far in Vietnam.

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Honduras

http://www.flutrackers.com/forum/showpost.php?p=300668&postcount=22

Radio America. A pregnant woman became the sixteenth fatality of influenza A H1N1.

The female from the municipality of Siguatepeque, Comayagua, died in the Honduran Social Security Institute (IHSS), health authorities confirmed.

According to reports, the 32 year old patient was 25 weeks pregnant and her death was reported on Sunday because of the swine flu.

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Columbia, South Carolina

http://www.heraldonline.com/109/story/1646562.html#

A doctor says a pregnant woman in South Carolina had died from swine flu shortly after giving birth.

University of South Carolina School of Medicine Dr. Anthony Gregg told WIS-TV that the woman had not received any kind of flu vaccine and her other children had gotten sick a few weeks before she died.

Gregg says the baby was delivered healthy and has yet to show any signs of the flu.

(hat tip pfi/pixie)

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Hanoi, Vietnam

http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/2009-10/05/content_12182990.htm

One patient, 25, was 24 weeks pregnant. She was admitted to the Ca Mau Childbirth Hospital on Sept. 22 with stomachache, fever and difficulty in breathing, according to a report on the ministry's website.

As the patient showed flu-like symptoms, doctors decided to transfer her on the same day to Ca Mau General Hospital to treat her as a A/H1N1 patient. The woman died on Sept. 28. Her sample was tested positive for the A/H1N1 influenza.

(hat tip pfi/helblindi)

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San Francisco, California

http://www.ksl.com/?nid=148&sid=8189637

We spoke with a California man who lost his wife to the H1N1 virus. For his family, losing a young mother to swine flu was almost incomprehensible.

Willie Packnett's wife, 33-year-old Nicole Savoy, died of the H1N1 virus days after she gave birth.

Dr. Kim Mulvihill chatted live to answer your questions and clear up any confusion surrounding the H1N1 flu and its vaccine.

"That was my hero, that was my best friend, that was my superwoman," Packnett says of Savoy.

Packnett is still in shock. Three months ago, his wife gave birth to a baby girl. Within days, the mother of four had trouble breathing. Within weeks, Nicole died. The coroner confirmed the cause of death as complications from the swine flu. Her family is struggling to understand why.

"I don't want to think what went wrong. I want to know what went wrong," Packnett says.

Nicole's son was tearful.

"Man, I don't want nobody out there to take this H1N1 thing for granted," Anthony Savoy said.

(hat tip pfi/homebody)

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