Impact of COVID-19 respiratory conditions on pregnancy outcomes in California.

Impact of COVID-19 respiratory conditions on pregnancy outcomes in California.

Publication date: Jan 14, 2026

The objective of this study is to identify the populations at greatest risk for COVID-19 complications during pregnancy and determine their adverse maternal and neonatal outcomes in a time period prior to vaccine availability. Cohort study using delivery hospitalization discharge data linked to vital records for all births in California during the baseline pre-COVID-19 period and for all births during the COVID-19 Study period. Among 344,894 deliveries, a total of 7181 (2. 08%) hospitalized patients tested positive for COVID-19 during pregnancy. Of these, 571 (0. 17%) patients were hospitalized with severe respiratory illness. Rate of severe maternal morbidity (242/571, 42%) and maternal death (10/571, 1. 8%) were markedly elevated in those hospitalized patients with COVID-19 related respiratory disease compared to both uninfected parturients and infected parturients with less severe disease. Higher rates of COVID-19 related respiratory conditions were associated with Hispanic ethnicity, Native American race, state-funded insurance, and lower education levels. In pregnancies complicated by COVID-19, the excess risks of maternal mortality, SMM, and adverse neonatal outcomes were restricted to the patients with COVID-19 related respiratory conditions. Significant disparities were noted for respiratory conditions, mortality and SMM related to race-ethnicity and socioeconomic status.

Concepts Keywords
California Adverse
Hispanic Births
Hospitalization California
Pregnancy Conditions
Covid
Hospitalized
Maternal
Neonatal
Outcomes
Parturients
Period
Pregnancy
Related
Respiratory
Severe

Semantics

Type Source Name
disease MESH COVID-19
disease MESH maternal death
disease MESH Long Covid

Original Article

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