A new study has suggested that pregnant women are four times more likely to be infected with covid-19 than the general population.
Pregnant women are much more likely to be exposed to the coronavirus than the general population, a new study suggests.
The study published in the journal Science Immunology found that more than six percent of pregnant women in Philadelphia had antibodies against SARS-CoV-2, the official name of the virus.
That’s four-fold the number of people in the City of Brotherly Love who also generated an immune response to the virus.
The team, from the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania, says the findings raise questions about whether or not pregnant women have a different immune response to COVID-19.
Co-lead author Dr Scott Hensley, an associate professor of Microbiology at Perelman, said in a statement,
“Pregnant women are fairly representative of community exposure, and these data provide more evidence, on top of what we already know with COVID-19, that health and socio-economic equity are inextricably linked. Hopefully, this will help lead to policies that address these inequities.”
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