Over the last six flu seasons, getting a flu shot reduced a pregnant woman鈥檚 risk of being hospitalized from flu by an average of 40 percent, according to a co-authored by the Centers for Disease and Control Prevention and published this week in Clinical Infectious Diseases. This is the first study to show vaccination protected pregnant women against flu-associated hospitalization; previous studies have shown that a flu shot can reduce a pregnant woman鈥檚 risk of flu illness. 鈥淓xpecting mothers face a number of threats to their health and the health of their baby during pregnancy, and getting the flu is one of them,鈥 said Allison Naleway, a study co-author from the Kaiser Permanente Center for Health Research. 鈥淭his study鈥檚 findings underscore the fact that there is a simple, yet impactful way to reduce the possibility of complications from flu during pregnancy: get a flu shot.鈥 CDC recommends pregnant women get a flu shot because they are at high risk of developing serious flu illness, including illness resulting in hospitalization.

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