COVID-19 Infection & Woman Health
COVID-19 Infection & Woman Health
COVID-19 Infection & Woman Health
Background:
The COVID-19 lockdown has changed life as so many people know it. While the
effects of the pandemic and lockdown have been felt by everyone across society, the
UN Population Fund said the COVID-19 pandemic could have serious consequences
for women's health. Taking into consideration:
- Access to medical treatments
- Economic factors
- Gender-based violence in the home, the organization said the pandemic may
only exacerbate inequalities for women.
Aims:
• Reduction of COVID19 transmission to pregnant women.
• Provision of safe care to women during COVID -19 pandemic, whether she is
suspected/confirmed COVID-19 or non-infected during pregnancy, birth and
early postnatal period.
• Provision of safe care to women during COVID -19 pandemic, whether she is
suspected / confirmed COVID-19 or non-infected with gynecological health
issues.
The virus:
Novel corona virus (SARS-COV-2) is a new strain of coronavirus causing COVID-
19, first identified in Wuhan City, China.
Epidemiology
• The virus appears to have originated in Hubei Province in China towards the
end of 2019.
• In Europe, Italy & Spain are the countries currently most affected.
• The Middle East has many reasons to fear the coronavirus pandemic, but it has
one big advantage when it comes to resisting it, that most people in the region
are young. The situation is changing over time.
Transmission:
• Most cases of COVID-19 globally have evidence of human to human
transmission, the virus can be readily isolated from respiratory secretions,
faeces and fomites. Routs of spread:
- Directly through close contact with an infected person (within 2 metres)
where respiratory secretions can enter the eyes, mouth, nose or airways. This
risk increases the longer someone has close contact with an infected person
who has symptoms.
- Indirectly via the touching of a surface, object or the hand of an infected
person contaminated with respiratory secretions and subsequently touching
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one’s own mouth, nose or eyes. Healthcare providers are recommended to
employ strict Infection prevention and control (IPC) measures.
• Vertical transmission (transmission from a woman to her baby antenatally or
intrapartum), two reports have published evidence of IgM for SARS-CoV-2 in
neonatal serum at birth. Since IgM does not cross the placenta, this would
represent a neonatal immune response to in utero infection; other study shows
that 2.5% of babies (n=6) had a positive swab within 12 hours of birth.
Previous case reports from China reported no evidence of SARSCoV-2 in
amniotic fluid, cord blood, neonatal throat swabs, placenta swabs, genital fluid
or breastmilk. Further investigation is required to prove vertical transmission.
Advice for all midwifery and obstetric services caring for pregnant
women:
Reducing the transmission of COVID-19 in maternity settings:
• Most women attending maternity services are healthy and are advised to
maintain social distancing.
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• Maternity services do all they can to protect women from contracting COVID-
19 during their maternity care by using appropriate personal protective
equipment (PPE).
• Particular consideration should be given to the care of pregnant women with
comorbidities. Shared waiting areas should be avoided and if admitted they
should be in a side room.
• Staff should have their appropriate PPE and make every effort to observe
social distancing measures at work, even when not patient facing. This
includes handwashing, eating in designated areas and maintaining a distance
of 2 metres between colleagues, where practical.
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Advice for services caring for pregnant women with suspected or
confirmed COVID-19:
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Regarding care of women in the second or third trimesters of
pregnancy.
General advice for services providing care to pregnant women with suspected or
confirmed COVID-19, where hospital attendance is necessary:
• Women should be advised to attend via private transport where possible.
• If an ambulance is required, the woman should alert the call handler that she is
currently in self-isolation for possible or confirmed COVID-19 affecting either
her or her household contact.
• Women should be asked to alert a member of maternity staff to their
attendance when on the hospital premises, by telephone, prior to entering the
hospital.
• Staff providing care should take PPE.
• Women should be met at the maternity unit entrance by staff wearing
appropriate PPE and be provided with a mask. The face mask should not be
removed until the woman is isolated in a suitable room.
• Isolation rooms should ideally have a defined area for staff to put on and
remove PPE, and suitable bathroom facilities.
• Only essential staff should enter the room and visitors should be kept to a
minimum.
• All non-essential items from the clinic/scan room should be removed prior to
the woman’s arrival.
• All clinical areas used must be cleaned after use.
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- Woman with an isolated fever should be investigated and treated accordingly.
By doing full blood count and if lymphopenia is identified then testing for
COVID-19 should also be offered.
• In the event of a pregnant woman attending with an obstetric emergency and
being suspected or confirmed to have COVID-19, maternity staff must first
follow strict IPC guidance. This includes transferring the woman to an
isolation room and donning appropriate PPE.
• Once IPC measures are in place, the obstetric emergency should be dealt with
as the priority. Do not delay obstetric care in order to test for COVID-19.
• Until test results are available, women with suspected COVID-19 (symptoms
which meet the case criteria) should be treated as though it is confirmed,
including cases where women decline testing.
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Women who develop new symptoms of COVID-19 during admission (antenatal,
intrapartum or postnatal):
• There is an estimated incubation period for COVID-19 of 0–14 days (mean 5–
6 days); an infected woman may therefore initially present asymptomatically,
developing symptoms later during an admission. Health professionals should
be aware of this possibility, particularly those who regularly measure women’s
vital signs (e.g. healthcare assistants).
• Women with new-onset respiratory symptoms, for suspected COVID-19,
should be isolated with appropriate infection control precautions and
investigated for possible SARS-CoV-2 infection, amongst other differential
diagnoses. Prophylaxis for VTE should be considered and prescribed unless
contraindicated.
• Women with an isolated fever should be investigated and treated accordingly.
This will include sending a full blood count and if lymphopenia is identified,
or the woman has other symptoms suggestive of COVID-19, testing for
COVID-19 should be considered.
• Suspected COVID-19 should not delay administration of therapy that would
otherwise usually be given (for example, IV antibiotics in woman with fever
and prolonged rupture of membranes).
Care in labour:
Considerations when caring for women in spontaneous or induced labour:
• The following members of the MDT should be informed: consultant
obstetrician, consultant anaesthetist, midwife-in-charge, consultant
neonatologist, neonatal nurse in charge and infection control team.
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• Efforts should be made to minimise the number of staff members entering the
room and units.
• Asymptomatic birth partners should be asked to wash their hands frequently.
• Maternal observations and assessment should be continued as per standard
practice, with the addition of hourly oxygen saturations: (Aim to keep oxygen
saturation more than 94%, titrating oxygen therapy accordingly).
• If the woman develops a fever, investigate and treat accordingly.
• Continuous electronic fetal monitoring in labour.
• In case of deterioration in the woman’s symptoms, make an individual
assessment regarding the risks and benefits of continuing the labour versus
proceeding to emergency caesarean birth if this is likely to assist efforts to
resuscitate the woman.
• The neonatal team should be given sufficient notice at the time of birth, to
allow them to attend and done PPE before entering the room/theatre.
• Delayed cord clamping is still recommended following birth, provided there
are no other contraindications. The baby can be cleaned and dried as normal,
while the cord is still intact.
Regarding mode of birth:
• Mode of birth should not be influenced by the presence of COVID-19, unless
the woman’s respiratory condition demands urgent intervention for birth
• When caesarean birth or other operative procedure is advised:
- For emergency caesarean births, donning PPE is time-consuming. This may
impact on the decision to delivery interval, but it must be done. Women and
their families should be told about this possible delay.
• An individualised informed discussion and decision should be made regarding
shortening the length of the second stage of labour with elective instrumental
birth in a symptomatic woman who is becoming exhausted or hypoxic.
Regarding analgesia:
• Epidural analgesia should be recommended in labour, to women with
suspected or confirmed COVID-19 to minimise the need for general
anaesthesia if urgent intervention for birth is needed.
• Entonox should be used with a single-patient microbiological filter.
- There is no evidence that the use of Entonox is an aerosol-generating
procedure (AGP).
Risk of venous thromboembolism:
• Following birth, women should be risk assessed for VTE.
• All women with suspected or confirmed COVID-19 should be discharged with
10 days’ supply of prophylactic LMWH, unless contraindicated or they would
be otherwise advised to have a longer course of prophylactic LMWH.
• The first dose of LMWH should be administered as soon as possible after
birth, provided there is no postpartum haemorrhage and regional analgesia has
not been used.
• Where regional analgesia has been used, LMWH can be administered 4 hours
after the last spinal injection or removal of the epidural catheter.
Personal protective equipment for labour:
• Chosen according to the type of intervention.
• Caesarean birth: specific advice on PPE when caring for pregnant women
with suspected/confirmed COVID-19 requiring caesarean birth.
Elective (planned) caesarean birth:
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• Assessment should consider the urgency of the birth, and the risk of infectious
transmission to other women, healthcare workers and, postnatally, to her baby.
• If it can’t be delayed safely, then it needs to be performed with full precaution.
• Elective caesarean delivery is done according to the obstetrical indications.
Planned induction of labour:
• If induction of labour cannot safely be delayed, the general advice for services
providing care is to take full precaution.
• Women should be admitted into an isolation room, in which they should
ideally be cared for the entirety of their hospital stay.
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• Do not assume all pyrexia is due to COVID-19 and also perform full sepsis-
six screening.
- Bacterial infection is an important differential diagnosis to COVID-19
infection. Need blood cultures and a low threshold for antibiotics at
presentation, with early review and rationalisation of antibiotics if COVID-19
is confirmed.
• Apply caution with IV fluid management.
- Given the association of COVID-19 with acute respiratory distress syndrome,
women with moderate to severe symptoms of COVID-19 should be monitored
using hourly fluid input/ output charts.
- Target is to achieve neutral fluid balance in labour, in order to avoid the risk of
fluid overload. Try boluses in volumes of 250–500 ml and then assess for fluid
overload before proceeding with further fluid resuscitation.
- All pregnant women admitted with COVID-19 infection (or suspected
COVID-19 infection) should receive prophylactic LMWH, unless birth is
expected within 12 hours (e.g. for a woman with increasing oxygen
requirements) or other contraindications exist.
• Where women with complications of COVID-19 are under the care of other
teams, such as intensivists or acute physicians, the appropriate dosing regimen
of LMWH should be discussed in an MDT that includes a senior obstetrician
and a local VTE expert.
• The diagnosis of PE should be considered in women with chest pain,
worsening hypoxia (particularly if there is a sudden increase in oxygen
requirements) or in women whose breathlessness persists or worsens after
expected recovery from COVID-19.
• The frequency and suitability of fetal heart rate monitoring should be
considered on an individual basis, taking into consideration the gestational age
of the fetus and the woman’s condition. If urgent intervention for birth is
indicated for fetal reasons, birth should be expedited as per standard practice,
as long as the woman is stable.
• An individualised assessment of the woman should be made by the MDT to
decide whether emergency caesarean birth or induction of labour is indicated,
either to assist efforts in maternal resuscitation or where there are serious
concerns regarding the fetal condition.
- Individual assessment should consider: the woman’s condition, the fetal
condition, the potential for improvement following elective birth and the
gestation of the pregnancy. The priority must always be the wellbeing of the
woman.
- If maternal stabilisation is required before intervention for birth, this is the
priority, as it is in other maternity emergencies, e.g. severe pre-eclampsia.
• Steroids should be given when indicated.
- As per standard practice, urgent intervention for birth should not be delayed
for their administration.
- There is no evidence to suggest that steroids for fetal lung maturation, when
they would usually be offered, cause any harm in the context of COVID-19.
• Prophylaxis for VTE should be prescribed during admission unless
contraindicated. At the time of discharge from hospital following a period of
care for confirmed COVID-19 infection, all women should be prescribed at
least 10 days of prophylactic LMWH.
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• There are some reports that even after a period of improvement there can be a
rapid deterioration. Following improvement in a woman’s condition, consider
an ongoing period of observation, where possible, for a further 24-48 hours.
On discharge, advise the woman to return immediately if she becomes more
unwell.
Postnatal care:
Neonatal care:
• The advise that women and healthy babies, not otherwise requiring neonatal
care, are kept together in the immediate postpartum period.
• A risk and benefits discussion with neonatologists and families to
individualise care in babies that may be more susceptible is recommended.
Infant feeding:
• Breast milk tested negative for COVID-19
• The main risk of breastfeeding is the close contact between the baby and the
woman, who is likely to share infective droplets.
• The benefits of breastfeeding outweigh any potential risks of transmission of
the virus through breastmilk. This is a view supported by the UNICEF Baby
Friendly Initiative.
• The following precautions should be taken to limit viral spread to the baby:
- Considering asking someone who is well to feed the baby.
- Wash hands before touching the baby, breast pump or bottles.
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- Avoid coughing or sneezing on the baby while feeding.
- Consider wearing a fluid-resistant surgical face mask, if available, while
feeding or caring for the baby.
- Where women are expressing breastmilk in hospital, a dedicated breast pump
should be used:
• Where a breast pump is used, follow recommendations for pump cleaning
after each use.
• For babies who are bottle fed with formula or expressed milk, strict
adherence to sterilisation guidelines is recommended .
Discharge and readmission to hospital
• Any women or babies requiring readmission for postnatal obstetric or
neonatal care during a period of self-isolation for suspected or confirmed
COVID-19 are advised to telephone their local unit ahead of arrival and
follow the attendance protocol as described in section previously.
Advice for services caring for pregnant women following isolation for symptoms,
or recovery from confirmed COVID-19
Antenatal care for pregnant women following self-isolation for symptoms
suggestive of COVID-19:
• Scheduled antenatal care that falls within the self-isolation period should
be rearranged for post-isolation.
• If a woman has previously tested negative for COVID-19, and she re-
presents with symptoms that meet the case definition, COVID-19 should
still be suspected (due to the rate of false negative results from COVID-19
naso-pharyngeal swabs).
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• Families should be provided with guidance about how to identify signs of
illness in their newborn or worsening of the woman’s symptoms and
provided with appropriate contact details if they have concerns or
questions about their baby’s wellbeing.
• Usual advice about safe sleeping and a smoke free environment should be
emphasised, along with provision of clear advice about careful hand
hygiene and infection control measures when caring for and feeding the
baby.
• All families self-isolate at home for 14 days after birth of a baby to a
woman with active COVID-19 infection.
• Postnatal care should continue according to the recommended schedule,
where safe to do so.
• Maternity services should offer a combination of face-to-face and remote
postnatal follow-up, according to the woman and baby’s needs. For
example, women with hypertensive diseases of pregnancy may require
face-to-face reviews, particularly if they don’t have access to home blood
pressure monitoring. If the baby is of low birth weight, premature or
where there any concerns about feeding, face to face appointments will be
needed in order to weigh and examine the baby fully.
• Where is it essential that women receive a face-to-face review in the
community, doctors and midwives are advised to wear appropriate PPE.
• For home visits other members of the household should be asked not to be
present in the room when the doctor or midwife is examining the woman
and her baby.
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anaemia or when symptoms suggestive of haemodynamic compromise and
will be seen within or after 30 days, according to the severity.
Intermenstrual Bleeding (IMB):
• Women of 40 years of age or over with persistent IMB (> 3 consecutive
months who are not using hormonal contraceptives) should be referred to
secondary care facility and seen within 30 days.
• Women under 40 years of age, or women of 40 years of age or over who
are using hormonal contraceptives, with persistent IMB (> 3 consecutive
months) should be referred to secondary care facility and may be seen
beyond 30 days.
Postmenopausal bleeding (PMB):
• PMB is a red flag symptom because 5 - 10% of women will have
endometrial cancer. Clinical management of PMB should be focused on
identifying cancer.
• Women with PMB should initially be managed by remote communication
to:
- Confirm the symptom.
- Determine if they have any symptoms of COVID-19.
- Be informed that she needs to be seen in a 2 week at the secondary care
facility.
• The risk of horizontal viral transmission from hospital assessment for
COVID-19 vulnerable needs to be balanced against the risk of delay in
diagnosis of a gynaecological cancer on a case by case basis.
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• Sexual assault care.
Colposcopy guidance:
• Only women who have had a recent cervical smear suggesting high grade
moderate or worse, BNC in endocervical cells or possible glandular
neoplasia, or suspicion of invasive disease should be seen for colposcopy.
Gynecological laparoscopy:
• In the absence of evidence that COVID-19 transmission is increased by the
generation of contaminated aerosols during gynaecological laparoscopic
surgery, recommendations are:
- All theatre staff should use PPE during all operations under general
anaesthetic whether by laparoscopy or laparotomy.
- Non-surgical methods of treatment should be actively recommended to reduce
the risk of COVID-19 transmission to health care workers, and reduce the
need for hospital admission, provided they are a safe alternative (for example
methotrexate use for unruptured ectopic pregnancy).
- Gynaecological operations that carry a risk of bowel involvement, however
small (for example tubo-ovarian abscess), should be performed by laparotomy.
- For other gynaecological laparoscopic operations (for example ruptured
ectopic pregnancy, ovarian cyst accident), need to be perform with minimum
time and operative complications.
- Suction devices, smoke evacuation filters, should be used to prevent potential
droplet transmission and avoid explosive dispersion of body fluids when
removing trocars and retrieving specimens.
- Only evacuate the pneumoperitoneum via direct suction using a vacuum
suction unit.
Urogynecology:
• Most patients seen with Urogynaecology complains, present with non-
urgent conditions such as prolapse and/or incontinence.
• There would be very few situations where they would present as an acute
medical emergency or where an emergency admission to hospital is
required.
• Important to remember that a large proportion of these patients are over 60
years of age making them more vulnerable to contract COVID 19 as they
are more likely to require hospitalisation.
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• Women with vaginal ring are mainly who require regular follow up, often
performed within the secondary health facility. Telephone consultations
can be of help to reassure the women that a slight delay of a few months to
the ring change will have no harmful effects.
Gynaecological cancers:
• Resumption of surgical and diagnostic services over the course of
pandemic will depend upon the variable COVID-19 disease prevalence in
each local area.
• Changing in the theatre environments, the need to wear PPE, operating in
unfamiliar environments. All of these factors slow surgery and make it
significantly more tiring.
• Where possible, utilization of spinal/ regional anaesthesia is encouraged to
enable safer operating and reduction in chest complications.
• Pre-operative testing and risk of peri-operative COVID-19 infection is
another evolving area. Current guidance is for self-isolation for 14 days,
asymptomatic for 7 days and COVID-19 swab within 48hrs prior to
surgery.
• Pre-operative chest CT had been suggested for patients who may require
critical care post-op.
• There will be a proportion of patients who have occult infection or acquire
infection in the immediate post-operative period despite
screening/precautions. The rate of this will depend upon the prevalence of
disease in the local population. These will need to be taken into account
when planning theatre lists.
• Operating teams may also need to consider restricting themselves to clean
COVID sites and may need testing at regular intervals.
• Chemotherapy and radiotherapy: In the event of limited chemotherapy
capacity, clinicians will be advised to follow local guidelines. This will
require a detailed discussion with the patient, which should take into
account the benefit of chemotherapy and the risk of COVID-19 infection
whilst on chemotherapy. Where possible alternative and less resource-
intensive regimens (such as single agent carboplatin or PARP inhibitors)
should be considered where appropriate.
• General principles, patients receiving curative radiotherapy for locally
advanced disease should be prioritized over patients receiving adjuvant
therapy. Patients where adjuvant therapy is likely to reduce local
recurrence, but not likely to prolong survival, can be carefully counselled
and RT withheld.
Note:
All the above-mentioned information may be altered as more evidence becomes
available. The advice based on the available evidences are graded as D and in some
cases graded as good practice points.
References:
1. Coronavirus Could Have Serious Consequences For Women's Health,
Says The UN. Apr 20, 2020.
https://www.forbes.com/sites/alicebroster/2020/04/20/coronavirus-could-
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un/#31f037aae0ab.
2. Coronavirus (COVID-19) Infection in Pregnancy/Information for
healthcare professionals/ RCOG Version 9: Published Wednesday, 13
May 2020
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April 2020
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gynaecological-services/
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2020.
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19 Pandemic, March 18th, 2020.
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care-of-fertility-patients-during-the-coronavirus-covid-19-pandemic/
7. Joint RCOG / BSGE Statement on gynaecological laparoscopic procedures
and COVID-19.
https://www.bsge.org.uk/news/joint-rcog-bsge-statement-on-
gynaecological-laparoscopic-procedures-and-covid-19/
8. BSUG Guidance on management of Urogynaecological Conditions and
Vaginal Pessary use during the Covid 19 Pandemic.
https://www.rcog.org.uk/globalassets/documents/guidelines/2020-04-09-
bsug-guidance-on-management-of-urogynaecological-conditions-and-
vaginal-pessary-use-during-the-covid-19-pandemic.pdf
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the
COVID-19 Pandemic. May 5th, 2020.
https://www.rcog.org.uk/globalassets/documents/guidelines/2020-05-05-
bgcs-covid-19-framework-v3.pdf.
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/ Center of Disease Control & Prevention.
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(UNHCR,UNICEF,WFP,WHO)/March 26/2020
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19-Algorithm.pdf
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