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Video Transcription
The CDC has a message for the vaccine and pregnant.
Get the coronavirus vaccine.
The agency is strengthening its recommendation after surveillance data showed no increase on miscarriage among the vaccinated.
It warns that failing to get the vaccine increases pregnant women's risk of hospitalization if they get COVID.
But there are still questions about getting the vaccine during pregnancy that both researchers and pregnant people would like answers to.
A study is underway to get those answers.
NPR's Joe Kauka visited one of the sites for the study in Texas.
Maybore College of Medicine is one of nine centers around the country that will be studying vaccinations during pregnancy.
There will be about 750 mothers who are pregnant when they are in birth and 250 who are postpartum when they are in birth.
Paul Munoz is one of the principal investigators for the study and she runs the program at Maybore.
This study is what's known as an observational study.
While the people on the study will get the vaccine, there is no proof that it is conceivable for comparison as they typically would be in a clinic.
That's because the vaccine is already widely available and recommended for pregnancy.
Munoz is glad pregnant people have access to a vaccine, but the ability to do clinical trials with a germ-specific infection in pregnancy was lost.
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