Quoted:Quote History Baby aspirin should be avoided by pregnant women or used under a dr.'s advice. No cold cuts, no cold hot dogs, medicine should be avoided where possible, no vaccinations are recommended either, this is all established knowledge.
Steroids are often given during pregnancies, some that are known to pass through the placenta for the baby and others for the mother are known to not pass (bells palsy treatment).
Do they know if this passes it, or not?
Why is this "vaccine" different from other vaccines?
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You make such authoritative statements, and yet many are so wrong. Much of what you said it NOT established knowledge and is, in fact, contrary to established knowledge.
ACOG (someone with your knowledge certainly knows who they are without hitting Google, right?) recommends a tetanus (TDaP) vaccine for EVERY pregnancy. If a woman gets pregnant every year for 5 years in a row, she'll have had 5 tetanus shots in 5 years. Influenza vaccines are also routinely recommended in pregnancy. Pneumonia vaccines are recommended for women at high risk for invasive pneumococcal disease. Same with HiB. And Meningococcal vaccine. And Hep B. And Hep A. Inactivated polio vaccine can be given to never-vaccinated pregnant women too. Even rabies vaccine, if high risk exposure.
The ones to avoid are the live, attenuated vaccines, like MMR, varicella, HPV and Flumist. Pro-tip: COVID vaccines are not live, attenuated vaccines.
Here's a page that reviews this information for physicians.
https://www.cdc.gov/vaccines/pregnancy/hcp-toolkit/resources.htmlThis vaccine is not different from other vaccines, with regards to recommendations in pregnancy.
Steroids are regularly used in pregnancy. You are correct that aspirin use in pregnancy should be at the direction of her physician.
Please stop posting harmful, false information.