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The impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on maternal and perinatal health: a scoping review
by
Tiemeier, Henning
, Kotlar, Bethany
, Petrillo, Sophia
, Gerson, Emily Michelle
, Langer, Ana
in
Asymptomatic
/ Breast Feeding
/ Breastfeeding & lactation
/ Cesarean section
/ Child & adolescent mental health
/ Coronaviruses
/ COVID-19
/ Delivery, Obstetric
/ Disease transmission
/ Domestic Violence
/ Epidemics
/ Female
/ Gender Equity
/ Health aspects
/ Humans
/ Infections
/ Laboratories
/ Management
/ Maternal & child health
/ Maternal and Child Health
/ Maternal Health
/ Maternal Health Services
/ Maternal-child transmission
/ Medicine
/ Medicine & Public Health
/ Mental Health
/ Newborn babies
/ Newborn health
/ Pandemics
/ Preeclampsia
/ Pregnancy
/ Pregnancy Complications, Infectious
/ Pregnant women
/ Public Health
/ Reproductive health
/ Reproductive Medicine
/ Review
/ SARS-CoV-2
/ Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2
/ Social aspects
/ Ventilators
/ Womens health
2021
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The impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on maternal and perinatal health: a scoping review
by
Tiemeier, Henning
, Kotlar, Bethany
, Petrillo, Sophia
, Gerson, Emily Michelle
, Langer, Ana
in
Asymptomatic
/ Breast Feeding
/ Breastfeeding & lactation
/ Cesarean section
/ Child & adolescent mental health
/ Coronaviruses
/ COVID-19
/ Delivery, Obstetric
/ Disease transmission
/ Domestic Violence
/ Epidemics
/ Female
/ Gender Equity
/ Health aspects
/ Humans
/ Infections
/ Laboratories
/ Management
/ Maternal & child health
/ Maternal and Child Health
/ Maternal Health
/ Maternal Health Services
/ Maternal-child transmission
/ Medicine
/ Medicine & Public Health
/ Mental Health
/ Newborn babies
/ Newborn health
/ Pandemics
/ Preeclampsia
/ Pregnancy
/ Pregnancy Complications, Infectious
/ Pregnant women
/ Public Health
/ Reproductive health
/ Reproductive Medicine
/ Review
/ SARS-CoV-2
/ Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2
/ Social aspects
/ Ventilators
/ Womens health
2021
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Do you wish to request the book?
The impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on maternal and perinatal health: a scoping review
by
Tiemeier, Henning
, Kotlar, Bethany
, Petrillo, Sophia
, Gerson, Emily Michelle
, Langer, Ana
in
Asymptomatic
/ Breast Feeding
/ Breastfeeding & lactation
/ Cesarean section
/ Child & adolescent mental health
/ Coronaviruses
/ COVID-19
/ Delivery, Obstetric
/ Disease transmission
/ Domestic Violence
/ Epidemics
/ Female
/ Gender Equity
/ Health aspects
/ Humans
/ Infections
/ Laboratories
/ Management
/ Maternal & child health
/ Maternal and Child Health
/ Maternal Health
/ Maternal Health Services
/ Maternal-child transmission
/ Medicine
/ Medicine & Public Health
/ Mental Health
/ Newborn babies
/ Newborn health
/ Pandemics
/ Preeclampsia
/ Pregnancy
/ Pregnancy Complications, Infectious
/ Pregnant women
/ Public Health
/ Reproductive health
/ Reproductive Medicine
/ Review
/ SARS-CoV-2
/ Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2
/ Social aspects
/ Ventilators
/ Womens health
2021
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The impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on maternal and perinatal health: a scoping review
Journal Article
The impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on maternal and perinatal health: a scoping review
2021
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Overview
Introduction
The Covid-19 pandemic affects maternal health both directly and indirectly, and direct and indirect effects are intertwined. To provide a comprehensive overview on this broad topic in a rapid format behooving an emergent pandemic we conducted a scoping review.
Methods
A scoping review was conducted to compile evidence on direct and indirect impacts of the pandemic on maternal health and provide an overview of the most significant outcomes thus far. Working papers and news articles were considered appropriate evidence along with peer-reviewed publications in order to capture rapidly evolving updates. Literature in English published from January 1st to September 11 2020 was included if it pertained to the direct or indirect effects of the COVID-19 pandemic on the physical, mental, economic, or social health and wellbeing of pregnant people. Narrative descriptions were written about subject areas for which the authors found the most evidence.
Results
The search yielded 396 publications, of which 95 were included. Pregnant individuals were found to be at a heightened risk of more severe symptoms than people who are not pregnant. Intrauterine, vertical, and breastmilk transmission were unlikely. Labor, delivery, and breastfeeding guidelines for COVID-19 positive patients varied. Severe increases in maternal mental health issues, such as clinically relevant anxiety and depression, were reported. Domestic violence appeared to spike. Prenatal care visits decreased, healthcare infrastructure was strained, and potentially harmful policies implemented with little evidence. Women were more likely to lose their income due to the pandemic than men, and working mothers struggled with increased childcare demands.
Conclusion
Pregnant women and mothers were not found to be at higher risk for COVID-19 infection than people who are not pregnant, however pregnant people with symptomatic COVID-19 may experience more adverse outcomes compared to non-pregnant people and seem to face disproportionate adverse socio-economic consequences. High income and low- and middle-income countries alike faced significant struggles. Further resources should be directed towards quality epidemiological studies.
Plain English summary
The Covid-19 pandemic impacts reproductive and perinatal health both directly through infection itself but also indirectly as a consequence of changes in health care, social policy, or social and economic circumstances. The direct and indirect consequences of COVID-19 on maternal health are intertwined. To provide a comprehensive overview on this broad topic we conducted a scoping review. Pregnant women who have symptomatic COVID-19 may experience more severe outcomes than people who are not pregnant. Intrauterine and breastmilk transmission, and the passage of the virus from mother to baby during delivery are unlikely. The guidelines for labor, delivery, and breastfeeding for COVID-19 positive patients vary, and this variability could create uncertainty and unnecessary harm. Prenatal care visits decreased, healthcare infrastructure was strained, and potentially harmful policies are implemented with little evidence in high and low/middle income countries. The social and economic impact of COVID-19 on maternal health is marked. A high frequency of maternal mental health problems, such as clinically relevant anxiety and depression, during the epidemic are reported in many countries. This likely reflects an increase in problems, but studies demonstrating a true change are lacking. Domestic violence appeared to spike. Women were more vulnerable to losing their income due to the pandemic than men, and working mothers struggled with increased childcare demands. We make several recommendations: more resources should be directed to epidemiological studies, health and social services for pregnant women and mothers should not be diminished, and more focus on maternal mental health during the epidemic is needed.
Publisher
BioMed Central,BioMed Central Ltd,Springer Nature B.V,BMC
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