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BeetlejuiceForSenate 36 points ago +37 / -1

I think that's manslaughter. It's certainly negligence, which is abhorrent for someone working in medicine. She may have killed her baby by ignoring science as a nurse so she could virtue signal.

EDIT: 'Experts' from the CDC say the mRNA vaccines aren't expected to cause serious problems with pregnancy, though concede there is currently insufficient data to be certain.

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deleted 18 points ago +18 / -0
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Barbs 14 points ago +15 / -1

She’s an MD.

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deleted 16 points ago +16 / -0
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independentbystander 2 points ago +2 / -0

She’s an MD.

WEW LAD

>Mother-instinct Deficiency

I assumed she was an LPN or intern, it's worse than I thought!

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Smurfy2 3 points ago +3 / -0

Haha she's a nurse as well? And calling herself MD what a big head

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TonsOfSalt 2 points ago +2 / -0

Medical organizations are actually advocating for vaccinating pregnant people. I wouldn't have taken the risk, but how exactly is she "ignoring the science"?

That's a pretty strong statement.

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BeetlejuiceForSenate 1 point ago +1 / -0

I thought I had read a while ago that it was not recommended. Upon further research, I should retract "ignoring the science", as it is being recommended to healthcare professionals, even pregnant ones. They are told they can make the personal decision though at this time there is insufficient data on the effects on pregnant women and their babies compared to non-pregnant women. So it would be more accurate to say that instead of ignoring science, she is trusting the experts in the absence of data.

Pregnant women or nursing moms who want the COVID-19 vaccine should get one, experts say. That’s true even though there’s a lack of safety data in these groups, according to guidance from the CDC, the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists (ACOG), and the Society for Maternal-Fetal Medicine.

Women who are pregnant and their doctors should weigh things like the extent of COVID-19 transmission in the community, the patient's risk of contracting COVID-19, risks of COVID-19 to the patient and baby, how well the vaccine works and its side effects, and the lack of data about COVID-19 vaccination during pregnancy.

"If pregnant people are part of a group that is recommended to receive a COVID-19 vaccine (eg, healthcare personnel), they may choose to be vaccinated," the CDC says.

https://www.webmd.com/vaccines/covid-19-vaccine/news/20201218/experts-pregnant-women-can-get-covid-vaccine