Skip to content
NOWCAST 바카라게임 온라인 바카라 게임 5 at Noon
Live Now
Advertisement

Fact Check: Do the COVID-19 vaccines affect my chances of pregnancy?

Fact Check: Do the COVID-19 vaccines affect my chances of pregnancy?
ONE MOM TO GET HER SHOT. WHEN ANGELA FOUND OUT SHE WAS PREGNANT SHE HAD CONCERNS ABOUT THE VICOD-19 VACCINE. >> IS EARLY ON IN HER PREGNANCY, -- IT IS EARLY ON IN YOUR PREGNANCY,. >> SHE HAD COVID BEFORANE D THOUGHT IT WOULD BE WORSE IF SHE GOT IT AGAIN WHILE PREGNANT. >> THE SIDE EFFECTS OF ETH VACCINE OR SHORTERND A EASIER TO GET THROUGH THAN HAVING COVID. >> SAINT LUKE SHA SEEN AN INCREASE IN UNVACCINATED WOMEN WITH COVID. >> YOU TO HER FOR THOSE PATIENTS. -- HURT FOR THOSE PATIENTS. THEY ARE SCARED. YOU WANT TO PREVENT THAT. THE ONLY WAY TO DO THAT IS VACCINE. >> ONE COMMON MISCONCEPTION THIS DOCTOR HEARS IS THAT THE VACCINE WILL ALTER THE BABY바카라 게임 웹사이트S DNA. >> WE UNDERSTAND THE MECHANISM OF THE MRNA SEEN. -- VACCINE.>> DATA FROM VACCINADTE PREGNANT WOMEN HAS SHOWN NO ADVERSE EFFECTS FOR MOM OR BABY. >> WE SEINE FORMATION THAT IS COMFORTING THAT THIS IS SAFE IN PREGNAY.NC KELLY: DOC
Advertisement
Fact Check: Do the COVID-19 vaccines affect my chances of pregnancy?
Do the COVID-19 vaccines affect my chances of pregnancy?No, there바카라 게임 웹사이트s no evidence that any vaccines, including COVID-19 vaccines, influence your chances of getting pregnant despite a myth suggesting otherwise.Medical experts say there바카라 게임 웹사이트s no biological reason the shots would affect fertility. And real-world evidence offers more assurance for anyone worried about their chances of conceiving: In Pfizer바카라 게임 웹사이트s study, a similar number of women became pregnant in the group given the vaccine as in the group given dummy shots.Researchers are starting to study anecdotal reports of short-term changes to periods after the vaccine, but there's no indication so far that the shots put fertility at risk, said Dr. Mary Jane Minkin, a gynecologist and professor at the Yale University School of Medicine.The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and obstetrician groups also recommend COVID-19 vaccines for pregnant individuals, who have a higher risk of severe illness if infected with the coronavirus. Research shows pregnant people who get the virus are more likely to be admitted to intensive care, receive invasive ventilation and die than their nonpregnant peers.The CDC also followed tens of thousands of pregnant women who got the vaccines and found they had comparable pregnancy outcomes to pregnant women before the pandemic.So whether you are thinking about having a baby, trying to conceive or undergoing fertility treatments, you should not delay vaccination, says Dr. Denise Jamieson, chair of the department of gynecology and obstetrics at Emory University School of Medicine.

Do the COVID-19 vaccines affect my chances of pregnancy?

No, there바카라 게임 웹사이트s no evidence that any vaccines, including COVID-19 vaccines, influence your chances of getting pregnant despite a suggesting otherwise.

Advertisement

Medical experts say there바카라 게임 웹사이트s the shots would affect fertility. And real-world evidence offers more assurance for anyone worried about their chances of conceiving: In , a similar number of women became pregnant in the group given the vaccine as in the group given dummy shots.

Researchers are starting to study anecdotal reports of short-term changes to periods after the vaccine, but there's no indication so far that the shots put fertility at risk, said Dr. Mary Jane Minkin, a gynecologist and professor at the Yale University School of Medicine.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and obstetrician groups also COVID-19 vaccines for pregnant individuals, who have a higher risk of severe illness if infected with the coronavirus. pregnant people who get the virus are more likely to be admitted to intensive care, receive invasive ventilation and die than their nonpregnant peers.

The CDC also followed tens of thousands of pregnant women who got the vaccines and they had comparable pregnancy outcomes to pregnant women before the pandemic.

So whether you are thinking about having a baby, trying to conceive or undergoing fertility treatments, you should not delay vaccination, says Dr. Denise Jamieson, chair of the department of gynecology and obstetrics at Emory University School of Medicine.