Some vaccines are safe for pregnant women, but not live vaccines like MMR or measles, mumps, rubella, the CDC warns. They are generally not recommended during pregnancy.
This latest study shows the vaccine does not increase the risk of having a baby born with major birth defects.
Modified live vaccines tend to produce slightly stronger and longer lasting immunity and may provide slightly higher fetal ...
The Oropouche virus has been linked to Zika-like outcomes in pregnant people, with cases more than doubling in 2024 ...
Researchers found no link between COVID vaccination in early pregnancy and birth defects, results show. There were also no differences in birth defect risk between either the Moderna and the ...
Lloyd Doggett and two other U.S. House representatives from Texas question information CDC is giving, recent firings and ...
Pregnant women in the Black Country are being reminded to come forward for a flu vaccine before the offer ends on 31 March.
Gardasil 9 is the only HPV vaccine used in the U.S., and it’s also one of the only vaccines on the market that actually ...
The MMR vaccine is highly safe and effective, according to experts. One dose confers 93% immunity against measles and 97% against rubella. With the second dose, measles immunity rises to 97%, too.
In 2025, the measles outbreak in West Texas, New Mexico, and several other states has resulted in over 250 cases and two ...
MONDAY, March 17, 2025 (HealthDay News) -- Pregnant women can get the COVID-19 vaccine without any fear of causing birth defects in their unborn child, a new study says. Researchers found no link ...