Confirmed SARS-CoV-2 infection in Scottish neonates 2020-2022: a national, population-based cohort study.
Anna GouldingFiona McQuaidLaura LindsayUtkarsh AgrawalBonnie AuyeungClara CalvertJade CarruthersCheryl DennyJack DonaghySam HillmanLisa E M HopcroftLeanne HopkinsColin McCowanTerry McLaughlinEmily MooreLewis RitchieColin R SimpsonBob TaylorLynda FentonLouisa PollockChristopher GaleJennifer J KurinczukChris RobertsonAziz SheikhSarah StockRachael WoodPublished in: Archives of disease in childhood. Fetal and neonatal edition (2023)
Confirmed neonatal SARS-CoV-2 infection was uncommon over the first 23 months of the pandemic in Scotland. Secular trends in the neonatal confirmed infection rate broadly followed those seen in the general population, although at a lower level. Maternal confirmed infection at birth was associated with an increased risk of neonatal confirmed infection. Two-thirds of neonates with confirmed infection had an associated admission to hospital, with resulting implications for the baby, family and services, although their outcomes were generally good. Ascertainment of confirmed infection depends on the extent of testing, and this is likely to have varied over time and between groups: the extent of unconfirmed infection is inevitably unknown.