Pregnant with Possibilities Resource Center is celebrating its ten-year anniversary. Here's how the agency is trying to help moms and babies.
Pregnant people who received a COVID-19 vaccine were far less likely to experience severe illness or deliver their babies prematurely, according to a major new UBC-led study published in JAMA.
Dr. Deborah Money, senior author of the paper published Monday in JAMA, said having such a large study "robustly" confirms ...
A new study says the COVID-19 vaccine protects pregnant women from getting severely ill or giving birth prematurely.
Multivariable analyses confirmed that vaccination remained associated with lower hospitalization risk in both periods after controlling for comorbid conditions. Compared with vaccinated patients, the ...
Pregnant people who receive a COVID vaccine are 60 percent less likely to experience severe disease and around 30 percent ...
Analysis of data from almost 20,000 pregnancies in Canada has revealed that getting a COVID-19 shot is a great idea for pregnant people – not just for their health, but the baby’s too. As well as ...
A number of diseases tend to peak in the winter, thanks to indoor gatherings that help germs spread. The list includes not ...
This condition refers to swollen, discolored toes. Early in the coronavirus pandemic, it was thought that some people who had been infected with the virus that causes COVID-19 developed swollen, ...
The US Food and Drug Administration intends to put a “black box” warning on Covid-19 vaccines, according to two people familiar with the agency’s plans.
It’s flu season and reported cases have been on the rise on Hawaii Island and statewide, officials say.