Health
Pregnant women with COVID-19 are less likely to show common symptoms, may be at higher risk of intensive care admission and could give birth early, new international study finds – University of Birmingham
Pregnant women, hospitalised with COVID-19 are less likely to manifest common virus symptoms and may be at an increased risk of intensive care admission, a new study into the impacts of COVID on pregnancy has found.

The study analysed the outcomes of 11,432 pregnant and recently pregnant women from the USA, Europe, Central and South-East Asia and South America.
Pregnant women, hospitalised with COVID-19 are less likely to manifest common virus symptoms like fever or muscle pain than non-pregnant women of the same age, and may be at an increased risk of intensive care admission, an international study into the impacts of COVID on pregnancy has found.
The living systematic review, which was a collaboration…
-
General17 hours ago
Australia’s Diamonds defeat South Africa’s Proteas 65-42 in third netball Test
-
Noosa News22 hours ago
Serious traffic crash, Noosa – Sunshine Coast
-
General18 hours ago
Thousands join pro-Palestinian rallies in towns and cities across Australia amid ceasefire
-
General22 hours ago
Record beach patrols in South Australia this summer as life savers help battle algal bloom