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SARS-CoV-2 infection in pregnancy in Denmark-characteristics and outcomes after confirmed infection in pregnancy: A nationwide, prospective, population-based cohort study.

Anna J M AabakkeLone KrebsTanja Gram PetersenFrank S KjeldsenGiulia CornKaren WøjdemannMette H IbsenFjola JonsdottirElisabeth RønnebergCharlotte S AndersenIben B SundtoftTine Dalsgaard ClausenJulie MilbakLars BurmesterBirgitte LindvedAnnette Thorsen-MeyerMohammed Rohi KhalilBirgitte HenriksenLisbeth JønssonLise L T AndersenKamilla K KarlsenMonica L PedersenÅse KlemmensenMarianne VestgaardDorthe Louise Ahrenkiel ThistedManrinder K TatlaLine S AndersenAnne-Line BrülleArense GulbechCharlotte Brix AnderssonRichard FarlieLea HansenLone E HvidmanAnne N W SørensenSidsel L RathckeKatrine H RubinLone Kjeld PetersenJan Stener JørgensenLonny StokholmMette Bliddal
Published in: Acta obstetricia et gynecologica Scandinavica (2021)
Only 1 in 20 women with SARS-CoV-2 infection during pregnancy required admission to hospital due to COVID-19. Risk factors for admission comprised obesity, smoking, asthma, and infection after GA 22 weeks. Severe adverse outcomes of SARS-CoV-2 infection in pregnancy were rare.
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