Maternal influenza vaccination during pregnancy protects infants against flu during their first six months of life.

Angelia A. Eick of the Armed Forces Health Surveillance Center and colleagues conducted a non-randomized observational cohort study on Navajo and White Mountain Apache Indian reservations, where children have a higher rate of severe respiratory infection than the general population.
A group of 1,169 women who delivered babies during one of three influenza seasons completed questionnaires about demographics, vaccination status of all family members and flu risk factors.
A total of 1,160 mother-infant pairs then gave blood samples that were assessed for flu antibody presence. Mothers completed a second questionnaire at the end of the flu season and surveillance was conducted throughout to track new influenza-like illnesses.
During the flu season following their birth, 193 (17 percent) of infants were hospitalised for influenza-like illness, 412 (36 percent) had only an outpatient visit for a respiratory cause and 555 (48 percent) had no flu- or flu-like episodes.
Infants whose mothers were vaccinated had a 41 percent lower risk of laboratory-confirmed influenza virus infection and a 39 percent reduced risk of hospitalisation from influenza-like illness. In addition, those with blood samples available had higher levels of flu antibodies at birth and at 2 to 3 months than babies born to unvaccinated women.
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Justin R. Ortiz and Kathleen M. Neuzil of the University of Washington wrote: "The burden of influenza among pregnant women, the excellent safety profile of the vaccine and the reliable immunogenicity of trivalent inactivated influenza vaccine in this group support a recommendation that all pregnant women receive influenza vaccine to decrease complications of influenza disease during their pregnancies."
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The findings were published in the Archives of Pediatrics and Adolescent Medicine, one of the JAMA/Archives journals.
Source-ANI