Can overweight docs really give credible weight loss advice?

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Thu, 07/15/2021 - 10:50

 

Kevin Gendreau, MD, a weight loss doctor at Southcoast Health in Fall River, Maine, lets patients know that he was once obese. He says this knowledge inspires and motivates them to lose weight.

Courtesy Dr. Kevin Gendreau
Dr. Kevin Gendreau, before and after losing 125 pounds in 18 months

After dropping 125 pounds over 18 months, “I can relate to their binges, hardships, and plateaus on a very personal level,” he says.

Peminda Cabandugama, MD, an endocrinologist and obesity medicine specialist at Truman Medical Center at the University of Missouri-Kansas City, has weighed between 180 and 240 pounds in the past decade. He now weighs 225 pounds and has a healthy lifestyle.

“I have had patients come to me saying, ‘I used to see a different weight loss doctor who was not heavy. But how can he understand what I’m going through?’” he says.

Dr. Cabandugama shares his weight loss struggles with patients “to dispel this myth that weight management is as simple as just eating too much and not exercising. It involves a smorgasbord of emotions and hormones, some within and outside of our control. I hope that sharing this allows me to connect more with my patients so that they know that even their health care professional goes through the same challenges that they do.”

“Patients are more likely to make behavior changes when doctors are supportive and have had similar experiences and talk about their stories,” says Wendy Bennett, MD, an obesity researcher and associate professor of medicine at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore.

Do patients respect overweight doctors?

While Dr. Gendreau and Dr. Cabandugama have lost weight, some doctors who would like to shed unwanted pounds have been unable to do so. What impact does this have on patients?  

Doctors sometimes have biased attitudes toward overweight patients, but few studies have looked at whether patients have biases towards overweight doctors. The results vary and may depend on whether or not the patients are overweight. 

A random online survey of 358 participants suggested that regardless of their own weight, people had biases about doctor weight gain. They viewed the overweight or obese doctors as less trustworthy and credible, which could lead the participants to reject their medical advice and change doctors. 

“Patients expect doctors who are providing health care to be doing everything they can to take care of their own health and well-being,” says Pamela Peeke, MD, an assistant clinical professor of medicine at the University of Maryland in Baltimore.

“I am a physician who believes you have to walk the talk — that the best teachers are those who live it,” she says.

Still, “I don’t think based on this one experimental study that we can conclude that overweight physicians are harming patients’ efforts to change their behavior,” notes Dr. Bennett, who was not involved in the study.

“I think that patients do often want to connect with their physicians on more personal levels, but without the story behind where the advice is coming from, patients may struggle to trust a provider who seems to be contradicting the messages,” she says.

A study that Dr. Bennett helped lead suggests that patients are not biased against overweight doctors if they themselves need to lose weight. A national survey of 600 overweight patients showed that 87% trusted diet advice from overweight primary care doctors, compared to 77% who trusted diet advice from doctors who had a healthy weight.

“This shows that patients were more trusting of physicians who are more like them, which can lead to better relationships. We know from the studies on race that patients are often more trusting of physicians from the same race as them,” says Dr. Bennett.

Dr. Gendreau says that when he was severely obese, some patients questioned whether to trust his weight loss advice.

“It was very awkward when they turned to me and  said, ‘What about you?’ I would respond that it’s my job to inform them about the risks to their health,” he says.

Nearly half (48%) of doctors said they are trying to lose weight, according to the 2021 Medscape Physician Lifestyle and Happiness Report. As a result, many doctors may end up in the position of seemingly advising to “do what I say, not what I do.”

Nearly three in five Americans are trying to lose weight, according to Gelesis poll results released in December 2020.

 

 

Should doctors pay more attention to wellness?

Doctors have an ethical duty to maintain their own health and wellness so they can provide safe and effective medical care. If they don’t have a healthy lifestyle, they need to make adjustments, the American Medical Association Code of Ethics advises.

Dr. Peeke agrees with the AMA. “We signed on to do this — we have to go out of our way to carve out time, even if it’s just 15 minutes where we hide away and eat that healthy lunch that we brought with us,” she says.

Dr. Gendreau suggests busy doctors do what he did.

“I started by bringing healthy snacks — small Ziploc bags filled with mixed nuts and berries — and expanded from there. This way, if I got hungry or stressed between patients, I would have easy access to something nutritious,” he says.

He and Dr. Peeke also suggest making protein shakes or berry smoothies that are low in sugar.

“These can keep you full for hours as you sip them between patients,” says Dr. Gendreau.

Convincing busy doctors to make lifestyle changes may be challenging. Sixty-five percent of those who responded to the Physician Lifestyle and Happiness Report say that they sometimes, rarely, or never focus on their health and wellness. Only 45% said they are eating healthy, and 65% said they exercise.  

“Self-care isn’t a priority for most physicians because we are taught to take care of others and to put them first,” says Dr. Gendreau. “Like many doctors, I had so many other priorities — family, friends, career. Also, my last year of medical school was so difficult that my priority was finishing. I pushed my health to the side and told myself that I could fix this later.”

Only about one in five medical schools require students to take a nutrition course, according to David Eisenberg, MD, an adjunct associate professor of nutrition at the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, Boston.

“I didn’t get one ounce of nutrition training, which is the reason I became a Pew Foundation scholar in nutrition and metabolism. I had to go outside of my traditional training,” says Dr. Peeke.

“Physicians are not adequately trained to do the behavioral counseling and motivational interviewing that is needed,” says Dr. Bennett. “We do a good job of diagnosing obesity based on body mass index and understanding the relationship with future health conditions. But most doctors struggle with both a lack of time and the skill set to make significant behavior changes.”

“Medical school curriculum is focused so heavily on the pathology and pathophysiology of obesity, rather than how to prevent it with the appropriate diet and exercise regimen,” Dr. Gendreau says. “My physician patients often tell me that their own education in the field of nutrition is lacking, which can affect their weight loss journey and what they teach their patients.”

Dr. Gendreau, crediting his own weight loss journey as well as his obesity medicine fellowship, says his confidence in discussing weight loss with patients has soared.

Reframing obesity as a chronic disease

Rather than criticizing overweight people, including doctors, for their personal health choices, a better approach is to think of weight or obesity as a chronic illness, says Dr. Bennett.

“If we understand that obesity is a chronic health condition that people are struggling with, we can empathize with them,” she says, recommending that more providers share their weight loss journeys with patients they give lifestyle advice to, which may help address and repair potential biases.


A version of this article first appeared on WebMD.com.

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Kevin Gendreau, MD, a weight loss doctor at Southcoast Health in Fall River, Maine, lets patients know that he was once obese. He says this knowledge inspires and motivates them to lose weight.

Courtesy Dr. Kevin Gendreau
Dr. Kevin Gendreau, before and after losing 125 pounds in 18 months

After dropping 125 pounds over 18 months, “I can relate to their binges, hardships, and plateaus on a very personal level,” he says.

Peminda Cabandugama, MD, an endocrinologist and obesity medicine specialist at Truman Medical Center at the University of Missouri-Kansas City, has weighed between 180 and 240 pounds in the past decade. He now weighs 225 pounds and has a healthy lifestyle.

“I have had patients come to me saying, ‘I used to see a different weight loss doctor who was not heavy. But how can he understand what I’m going through?’” he says.

Dr. Cabandugama shares his weight loss struggles with patients “to dispel this myth that weight management is as simple as just eating too much and not exercising. It involves a smorgasbord of emotions and hormones, some within and outside of our control. I hope that sharing this allows me to connect more with my patients so that they know that even their health care professional goes through the same challenges that they do.”

“Patients are more likely to make behavior changes when doctors are supportive and have had similar experiences and talk about their stories,” says Wendy Bennett, MD, an obesity researcher and associate professor of medicine at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore.

Do patients respect overweight doctors?

While Dr. Gendreau and Dr. Cabandugama have lost weight, some doctors who would like to shed unwanted pounds have been unable to do so. What impact does this have on patients?  

Doctors sometimes have biased attitudes toward overweight patients, but few studies have looked at whether patients have biases towards overweight doctors. The results vary and may depend on whether or not the patients are overweight. 

A random online survey of 358 participants suggested that regardless of their own weight, people had biases about doctor weight gain. They viewed the overweight or obese doctors as less trustworthy and credible, which could lead the participants to reject their medical advice and change doctors. 

“Patients expect doctors who are providing health care to be doing everything they can to take care of their own health and well-being,” says Pamela Peeke, MD, an assistant clinical professor of medicine at the University of Maryland in Baltimore.

“I am a physician who believes you have to walk the talk — that the best teachers are those who live it,” she says.

Still, “I don’t think based on this one experimental study that we can conclude that overweight physicians are harming patients’ efforts to change their behavior,” notes Dr. Bennett, who was not involved in the study.

“I think that patients do often want to connect with their physicians on more personal levels, but without the story behind where the advice is coming from, patients may struggle to trust a provider who seems to be contradicting the messages,” she says.

A study that Dr. Bennett helped lead suggests that patients are not biased against overweight doctors if they themselves need to lose weight. A national survey of 600 overweight patients showed that 87% trusted diet advice from overweight primary care doctors, compared to 77% who trusted diet advice from doctors who had a healthy weight.

“This shows that patients were more trusting of physicians who are more like them, which can lead to better relationships. We know from the studies on race that patients are often more trusting of physicians from the same race as them,” says Dr. Bennett.

Dr. Gendreau says that when he was severely obese, some patients questioned whether to trust his weight loss advice.

“It was very awkward when they turned to me and  said, ‘What about you?’ I would respond that it’s my job to inform them about the risks to their health,” he says.

Nearly half (48%) of doctors said they are trying to lose weight, according to the 2021 Medscape Physician Lifestyle and Happiness Report. As a result, many doctors may end up in the position of seemingly advising to “do what I say, not what I do.”

Nearly three in five Americans are trying to lose weight, according to Gelesis poll results released in December 2020.

 

 

Should doctors pay more attention to wellness?

Doctors have an ethical duty to maintain their own health and wellness so they can provide safe and effective medical care. If they don’t have a healthy lifestyle, they need to make adjustments, the American Medical Association Code of Ethics advises.

Dr. Peeke agrees with the AMA. “We signed on to do this — we have to go out of our way to carve out time, even if it’s just 15 minutes where we hide away and eat that healthy lunch that we brought with us,” she says.

Dr. Gendreau suggests busy doctors do what he did.

“I started by bringing healthy snacks — small Ziploc bags filled with mixed nuts and berries — and expanded from there. This way, if I got hungry or stressed between patients, I would have easy access to something nutritious,” he says.

He and Dr. Peeke also suggest making protein shakes or berry smoothies that are low in sugar.

“These can keep you full for hours as you sip them between patients,” says Dr. Gendreau.

Convincing busy doctors to make lifestyle changes may be challenging. Sixty-five percent of those who responded to the Physician Lifestyle and Happiness Report say that they sometimes, rarely, or never focus on their health and wellness. Only 45% said they are eating healthy, and 65% said they exercise.  

“Self-care isn’t a priority for most physicians because we are taught to take care of others and to put them first,” says Dr. Gendreau. “Like many doctors, I had so many other priorities — family, friends, career. Also, my last year of medical school was so difficult that my priority was finishing. I pushed my health to the side and told myself that I could fix this later.”

Only about one in five medical schools require students to take a nutrition course, according to David Eisenberg, MD, an adjunct associate professor of nutrition at the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, Boston.

“I didn’t get one ounce of nutrition training, which is the reason I became a Pew Foundation scholar in nutrition and metabolism. I had to go outside of my traditional training,” says Dr. Peeke.

“Physicians are not adequately trained to do the behavioral counseling and motivational interviewing that is needed,” says Dr. Bennett. “We do a good job of diagnosing obesity based on body mass index and understanding the relationship with future health conditions. But most doctors struggle with both a lack of time and the skill set to make significant behavior changes.”

“Medical school curriculum is focused so heavily on the pathology and pathophysiology of obesity, rather than how to prevent it with the appropriate diet and exercise regimen,” Dr. Gendreau says. “My physician patients often tell me that their own education in the field of nutrition is lacking, which can affect their weight loss journey and what they teach their patients.”

Dr. Gendreau, crediting his own weight loss journey as well as his obesity medicine fellowship, says his confidence in discussing weight loss with patients has soared.

Reframing obesity as a chronic disease

Rather than criticizing overweight people, including doctors, for their personal health choices, a better approach is to think of weight or obesity as a chronic illness, says Dr. Bennett.

“If we understand that obesity is a chronic health condition that people are struggling with, we can empathize with them,” she says, recommending that more providers share their weight loss journeys with patients they give lifestyle advice to, which may help address and repair potential biases.


A version of this article first appeared on WebMD.com.

 

Kevin Gendreau, MD, a weight loss doctor at Southcoast Health in Fall River, Maine, lets patients know that he was once obese. He says this knowledge inspires and motivates them to lose weight.

Courtesy Dr. Kevin Gendreau
Dr. Kevin Gendreau, before and after losing 125 pounds in 18 months

After dropping 125 pounds over 18 months, “I can relate to their binges, hardships, and plateaus on a very personal level,” he says.

Peminda Cabandugama, MD, an endocrinologist and obesity medicine specialist at Truman Medical Center at the University of Missouri-Kansas City, has weighed between 180 and 240 pounds in the past decade. He now weighs 225 pounds and has a healthy lifestyle.

“I have had patients come to me saying, ‘I used to see a different weight loss doctor who was not heavy. But how can he understand what I’m going through?’” he says.

Dr. Cabandugama shares his weight loss struggles with patients “to dispel this myth that weight management is as simple as just eating too much and not exercising. It involves a smorgasbord of emotions and hormones, some within and outside of our control. I hope that sharing this allows me to connect more with my patients so that they know that even their health care professional goes through the same challenges that they do.”

“Patients are more likely to make behavior changes when doctors are supportive and have had similar experiences and talk about their stories,” says Wendy Bennett, MD, an obesity researcher and associate professor of medicine at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore.

Do patients respect overweight doctors?

While Dr. Gendreau and Dr. Cabandugama have lost weight, some doctors who would like to shed unwanted pounds have been unable to do so. What impact does this have on patients?  

Doctors sometimes have biased attitudes toward overweight patients, but few studies have looked at whether patients have biases towards overweight doctors. The results vary and may depend on whether or not the patients are overweight. 

A random online survey of 358 participants suggested that regardless of their own weight, people had biases about doctor weight gain. They viewed the overweight or obese doctors as less trustworthy and credible, which could lead the participants to reject their medical advice and change doctors. 

“Patients expect doctors who are providing health care to be doing everything they can to take care of their own health and well-being,” says Pamela Peeke, MD, an assistant clinical professor of medicine at the University of Maryland in Baltimore.

“I am a physician who believes you have to walk the talk — that the best teachers are those who live it,” she says.

Still, “I don’t think based on this one experimental study that we can conclude that overweight physicians are harming patients’ efforts to change their behavior,” notes Dr. Bennett, who was not involved in the study.

“I think that patients do often want to connect with their physicians on more personal levels, but without the story behind where the advice is coming from, patients may struggle to trust a provider who seems to be contradicting the messages,” she says.

A study that Dr. Bennett helped lead suggests that patients are not biased against overweight doctors if they themselves need to lose weight. A national survey of 600 overweight patients showed that 87% trusted diet advice from overweight primary care doctors, compared to 77% who trusted diet advice from doctors who had a healthy weight.

“This shows that patients were more trusting of physicians who are more like them, which can lead to better relationships. We know from the studies on race that patients are often more trusting of physicians from the same race as them,” says Dr. Bennett.

Dr. Gendreau says that when he was severely obese, some patients questioned whether to trust his weight loss advice.

“It was very awkward when they turned to me and  said, ‘What about you?’ I would respond that it’s my job to inform them about the risks to their health,” he says.

Nearly half (48%) of doctors said they are trying to lose weight, according to the 2021 Medscape Physician Lifestyle and Happiness Report. As a result, many doctors may end up in the position of seemingly advising to “do what I say, not what I do.”

Nearly three in five Americans are trying to lose weight, according to Gelesis poll results released in December 2020.

 

 

Should doctors pay more attention to wellness?

Doctors have an ethical duty to maintain their own health and wellness so they can provide safe and effective medical care. If they don’t have a healthy lifestyle, they need to make adjustments, the American Medical Association Code of Ethics advises.

Dr. Peeke agrees with the AMA. “We signed on to do this — we have to go out of our way to carve out time, even if it’s just 15 minutes where we hide away and eat that healthy lunch that we brought with us,” she says.

Dr. Gendreau suggests busy doctors do what he did.

“I started by bringing healthy snacks — small Ziploc bags filled with mixed nuts and berries — and expanded from there. This way, if I got hungry or stressed between patients, I would have easy access to something nutritious,” he says.

He and Dr. Peeke also suggest making protein shakes or berry smoothies that are low in sugar.

“These can keep you full for hours as you sip them between patients,” says Dr. Gendreau.

Convincing busy doctors to make lifestyle changes may be challenging. Sixty-five percent of those who responded to the Physician Lifestyle and Happiness Report say that they sometimes, rarely, or never focus on their health and wellness. Only 45% said they are eating healthy, and 65% said they exercise.  

“Self-care isn’t a priority for most physicians because we are taught to take care of others and to put them first,” says Dr. Gendreau. “Like many doctors, I had so many other priorities — family, friends, career. Also, my last year of medical school was so difficult that my priority was finishing. I pushed my health to the side and told myself that I could fix this later.”

Only about one in five medical schools require students to take a nutrition course, according to David Eisenberg, MD, an adjunct associate professor of nutrition at the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, Boston.

“I didn’t get one ounce of nutrition training, which is the reason I became a Pew Foundation scholar in nutrition and metabolism. I had to go outside of my traditional training,” says Dr. Peeke.

“Physicians are not adequately trained to do the behavioral counseling and motivational interviewing that is needed,” says Dr. Bennett. “We do a good job of diagnosing obesity based on body mass index and understanding the relationship with future health conditions. But most doctors struggle with both a lack of time and the skill set to make significant behavior changes.”

“Medical school curriculum is focused so heavily on the pathology and pathophysiology of obesity, rather than how to prevent it with the appropriate diet and exercise regimen,” Dr. Gendreau says. “My physician patients often tell me that their own education in the field of nutrition is lacking, which can affect their weight loss journey and what they teach their patients.”

Dr. Gendreau, crediting his own weight loss journey as well as his obesity medicine fellowship, says his confidence in discussing weight loss with patients has soared.

Reframing obesity as a chronic disease

Rather than criticizing overweight people, including doctors, for their personal health choices, a better approach is to think of weight or obesity as a chronic illness, says Dr. Bennett.

“If we understand that obesity is a chronic health condition that people are struggling with, we can empathize with them,” she says, recommending that more providers share their weight loss journeys with patients they give lifestyle advice to, which may help address and repair potential biases.


A version of this article first appeared on WebMD.com.

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Who can call themselves ‘doctor’? The debate heats up

Article Type
Changed
Fri, 05/07/2021 - 12:40

Physicians and nonphysicians clearly differ in whether or not a PhD or EdD should be able to call themselves ‘doctor,’ a new Medscape poll Who Should Get to Be Called ‘Doctor’? shows. The topic has clearly struck a nerve, since a record number of respondents – over 12,000 – voted in the poll.

Most physicians think it’s appropriate for people with other doctorate degrees such as a PhD or EdD to call themselves ‘doctor,’ although slightly more than half said it depends on the context.

The controversy over who gets to be called a doctor was reignited when a Wall Street Journal opinion piece criticized First Lady Jill Biden, EdD, for wanting to be called “Dr Biden.” The piece also challenged the idea that having a PhD is worth the honorific of ‘doctor.’

Medical ethicist Arthur Caplan, PhD, disagreed with that viewpoint, saying the context matters. For example, he prefers to be called “professor” when he’s introduced to the public rather than “doctor” to avoid any confusion about his professional status.

More than 12,000 clinicians including physicians, medical students, nurses, pharmacists, and other health care professionals responded to the poll. The non-MD clinicians were the most likely to say it was always appropriate to be called “doctor” while physicians were the least likely.
 

Context matters

Large percentages of clinicians – 54% of doctors, 62% of medical students, and 41% of nurses – said that the context matters for being called “doctor.’’

“I earned my PhD in 1995 and my MD in 2000. I think it is contextual. In a research or University setting, “Dr.” seems appropriate for a PhD. That same person in public should probably not hold themselves out as “Dr.” So, maybe MDs and DOs can choose, while others maintain the title in their specific setting.” 

Some readers proposed that people with MDs call themselves physicians rather than doctors. Said one: “Anyone with a terminal doctorate degree has the right to use the word doctor.  As a physician when someone asks what I do, I say: ‘I am a physician.’ Problem solved. There can only be one physician but there are many types of doctors.”

Physicians and nurses differed most in their views. Just 24% of physicians said it was always appropriate for people with other doctorate degrees to call themselves doctor whereas about an equal number (22%) thought it was never appropriate.

In contrast, 43% of nurses (including advance practice nurses) said it was always appropriate for people with non-MD doctorates to be called doctor. Only 16% said it’s never appropriate. 

This difference may reflect the growing number of nurses with doctorate degrees, either a DNP or PhD, who want to be called doctor in clinical settings.

Age made a difference too. Only 16% of physicians younger than age 45 said it was always appropriate for people with non-MD doctorate degrees to be called doctor, compared with 27% of physicians aged 45 and up.

Medical students (31%) were also more likely than physicians to say it was always appropriate for non-MD doctorates to use the title “doctor” and 64% said it depends on the context. This was noteworthy because twice as many medical students as physicians (16% vs. 8%) said they work in academia, research, or military government settings.
 

 

 

Too many ‘doctors’ confuse the public

Physicians (70%) were also more likely to say it was always or often confusing for the public to hear someone without a medical degree addressed as “doctor.” Only 6% of physicians thought it was never or rarely confusing.

Nurses disagreed. Just 45% said that it was always or often confusing while 16% said it was never or rarely confusing.

Medical students were more aligned with physicians on this issue – 60% said it was always or often confusing to the public and just 10% said it was never or rarely confusing.  

One reader commented, “The problem is the confusion the ‘doctor’ title causes for patients, especially in a hospital setting. Is the ‘doctor’ a physician, a pharmacist, a psychologist, a nurse, etc., etc.? We need to think not of our own egos but if and how  the confusion about this plethora of titles may be hindering good patient care.”

These concerns are not unfounded. The American Medical Association reported in its Truth in Advertising campaign that “patients mistake physicians with nonphysician providers” based on an online survey of 802 adults in 2018. The participants thought these specialists were MDs: dentists (61%), podiatrists (67%), optometrists (47%), psychologists (43%), doctors of nursing (39%), and chiropractors (27%).

The AMA has advocated that states pass the “Health Care Professional Transparency Act,” which New Jersey has enacted. The law requires all health care professionals dealing with patients to wear a name tag that clearly identifies their licensure. Health care professionals must also display their education, training, and licensure in their office.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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Physicians and nonphysicians clearly differ in whether or not a PhD or EdD should be able to call themselves ‘doctor,’ a new Medscape poll Who Should Get to Be Called ‘Doctor’? shows. The topic has clearly struck a nerve, since a record number of respondents – over 12,000 – voted in the poll.

Most physicians think it’s appropriate for people with other doctorate degrees such as a PhD or EdD to call themselves ‘doctor,’ although slightly more than half said it depends on the context.

The controversy over who gets to be called a doctor was reignited when a Wall Street Journal opinion piece criticized First Lady Jill Biden, EdD, for wanting to be called “Dr Biden.” The piece also challenged the idea that having a PhD is worth the honorific of ‘doctor.’

Medical ethicist Arthur Caplan, PhD, disagreed with that viewpoint, saying the context matters. For example, he prefers to be called “professor” when he’s introduced to the public rather than “doctor” to avoid any confusion about his professional status.

More than 12,000 clinicians including physicians, medical students, nurses, pharmacists, and other health care professionals responded to the poll. The non-MD clinicians were the most likely to say it was always appropriate to be called “doctor” while physicians were the least likely.
 

Context matters

Large percentages of clinicians – 54% of doctors, 62% of medical students, and 41% of nurses – said that the context matters for being called “doctor.’’

“I earned my PhD in 1995 and my MD in 2000. I think it is contextual. In a research or University setting, “Dr.” seems appropriate for a PhD. That same person in public should probably not hold themselves out as “Dr.” So, maybe MDs and DOs can choose, while others maintain the title in their specific setting.” 

Some readers proposed that people with MDs call themselves physicians rather than doctors. Said one: “Anyone with a terminal doctorate degree has the right to use the word doctor.  As a physician when someone asks what I do, I say: ‘I am a physician.’ Problem solved. There can only be one physician but there are many types of doctors.”

Physicians and nurses differed most in their views. Just 24% of physicians said it was always appropriate for people with other doctorate degrees to call themselves doctor whereas about an equal number (22%) thought it was never appropriate.

In contrast, 43% of nurses (including advance practice nurses) said it was always appropriate for people with non-MD doctorates to be called doctor. Only 16% said it’s never appropriate. 

This difference may reflect the growing number of nurses with doctorate degrees, either a DNP or PhD, who want to be called doctor in clinical settings.

Age made a difference too. Only 16% of physicians younger than age 45 said it was always appropriate for people with non-MD doctorate degrees to be called doctor, compared with 27% of physicians aged 45 and up.

Medical students (31%) were also more likely than physicians to say it was always appropriate for non-MD doctorates to use the title “doctor” and 64% said it depends on the context. This was noteworthy because twice as many medical students as physicians (16% vs. 8%) said they work in academia, research, or military government settings.
 

 

 

Too many ‘doctors’ confuse the public

Physicians (70%) were also more likely to say it was always or often confusing for the public to hear someone without a medical degree addressed as “doctor.” Only 6% of physicians thought it was never or rarely confusing.

Nurses disagreed. Just 45% said that it was always or often confusing while 16% said it was never or rarely confusing.

Medical students were more aligned with physicians on this issue – 60% said it was always or often confusing to the public and just 10% said it was never or rarely confusing.  

One reader commented, “The problem is the confusion the ‘doctor’ title causes for patients, especially in a hospital setting. Is the ‘doctor’ a physician, a pharmacist, a psychologist, a nurse, etc., etc.? We need to think not of our own egos but if and how  the confusion about this plethora of titles may be hindering good patient care.”

These concerns are not unfounded. The American Medical Association reported in its Truth in Advertising campaign that “patients mistake physicians with nonphysician providers” based on an online survey of 802 adults in 2018. The participants thought these specialists were MDs: dentists (61%), podiatrists (67%), optometrists (47%), psychologists (43%), doctors of nursing (39%), and chiropractors (27%).

The AMA has advocated that states pass the “Health Care Professional Transparency Act,” which New Jersey has enacted. The law requires all health care professionals dealing with patients to wear a name tag that clearly identifies their licensure. Health care professionals must also display their education, training, and licensure in their office.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

Physicians and nonphysicians clearly differ in whether or not a PhD or EdD should be able to call themselves ‘doctor,’ a new Medscape poll Who Should Get to Be Called ‘Doctor’? shows. The topic has clearly struck a nerve, since a record number of respondents – over 12,000 – voted in the poll.

Most physicians think it’s appropriate for people with other doctorate degrees such as a PhD or EdD to call themselves ‘doctor,’ although slightly more than half said it depends on the context.

The controversy over who gets to be called a doctor was reignited when a Wall Street Journal opinion piece criticized First Lady Jill Biden, EdD, for wanting to be called “Dr Biden.” The piece also challenged the idea that having a PhD is worth the honorific of ‘doctor.’

Medical ethicist Arthur Caplan, PhD, disagreed with that viewpoint, saying the context matters. For example, he prefers to be called “professor” when he’s introduced to the public rather than “doctor” to avoid any confusion about his professional status.

More than 12,000 clinicians including physicians, medical students, nurses, pharmacists, and other health care professionals responded to the poll. The non-MD clinicians were the most likely to say it was always appropriate to be called “doctor” while physicians were the least likely.
 

Context matters

Large percentages of clinicians – 54% of doctors, 62% of medical students, and 41% of nurses – said that the context matters for being called “doctor.’’

“I earned my PhD in 1995 and my MD in 2000. I think it is contextual. In a research or University setting, “Dr.” seems appropriate for a PhD. That same person in public should probably not hold themselves out as “Dr.” So, maybe MDs and DOs can choose, while others maintain the title in their specific setting.” 

Some readers proposed that people with MDs call themselves physicians rather than doctors. Said one: “Anyone with a terminal doctorate degree has the right to use the word doctor.  As a physician when someone asks what I do, I say: ‘I am a physician.’ Problem solved. There can only be one physician but there are many types of doctors.”

Physicians and nurses differed most in their views. Just 24% of physicians said it was always appropriate for people with other doctorate degrees to call themselves doctor whereas about an equal number (22%) thought it was never appropriate.

In contrast, 43% of nurses (including advance practice nurses) said it was always appropriate for people with non-MD doctorates to be called doctor. Only 16% said it’s never appropriate. 

This difference may reflect the growing number of nurses with doctorate degrees, either a DNP or PhD, who want to be called doctor in clinical settings.

Age made a difference too. Only 16% of physicians younger than age 45 said it was always appropriate for people with non-MD doctorate degrees to be called doctor, compared with 27% of physicians aged 45 and up.

Medical students (31%) were also more likely than physicians to say it was always appropriate for non-MD doctorates to use the title “doctor” and 64% said it depends on the context. This was noteworthy because twice as many medical students as physicians (16% vs. 8%) said they work in academia, research, or military government settings.
 

 

 

Too many ‘doctors’ confuse the public

Physicians (70%) were also more likely to say it was always or often confusing for the public to hear someone without a medical degree addressed as “doctor.” Only 6% of physicians thought it was never or rarely confusing.

Nurses disagreed. Just 45% said that it was always or often confusing while 16% said it was never or rarely confusing.

Medical students were more aligned with physicians on this issue – 60% said it was always or often confusing to the public and just 10% said it was never or rarely confusing.  

One reader commented, “The problem is the confusion the ‘doctor’ title causes for patients, especially in a hospital setting. Is the ‘doctor’ a physician, a pharmacist, a psychologist, a nurse, etc., etc.? We need to think not of our own egos but if and how  the confusion about this plethora of titles may be hindering good patient care.”

These concerns are not unfounded. The American Medical Association reported in its Truth in Advertising campaign that “patients mistake physicians with nonphysician providers” based on an online survey of 802 adults in 2018. The participants thought these specialists were MDs: dentists (61%), podiatrists (67%), optometrists (47%), psychologists (43%), doctors of nursing (39%), and chiropractors (27%).

The AMA has advocated that states pass the “Health Care Professional Transparency Act,” which New Jersey has enacted. The law requires all health care professionals dealing with patients to wear a name tag that clearly identifies their licensure. Health care professionals must also display their education, training, and licensure in their office.

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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More signs COVID shots are safe for pregnant women

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Changed
Thu, 08/26/2021 - 15:48

As the U.S. races to vaccinate millions of people against the coronavirus, pregnant women face the extra challenge of not knowing whether the vaccines are safe for them or their unborn babies.

None of the recent COVID-19 vaccine trials, including those for Pfizer, Moderna, and Johnson & Johnson, enrolled pregnant or breastfeeding women because they consider them a high-risk group.

That was despite the Society for Maternal-Fetal Medicine and the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists asking that pregnant and breastfeeding women be included in trials. The Food and Drug Administration even included pregnant women in the COVID-19 vaccine emergency use authorization (EUA) because of their higher risk of having a more severe disease.

Despite that lack of clinical trial data, more and more smaller studies are suggesting that the vaccines are safe for both mother and child.

Pfizer is now studying its two-dose vaccine in 4,000 pregnant and breastfeeding women to see how safe, tolerated, and robust their immune response is. Researchers will also look at how safe the vaccine is for infants and whether mothers pass along antibodies to children. But the preliminary results won’t be available until the end of the year, a Pfizer spokesperson says.

Without that information, pregnant women are less likely to get vaccinated, according to a large international survey. Less than 45% of pregnant women in the United States said they intended to get vaccinated even when they were told the vaccine was safe and 90% effective. That figure rises to 52% of pregnant women in 16 countries, including the United States, compared with 74% of nonpregnant women willing to be vaccinated. The findings were published online March 1, 2021, in the European Journal of Epidemiology.

The vaccine-hesitant pregnant women in the international study were most concerned that the COVID-19 vaccine could harm their developing fetuses, a worry related to the lack of clinical evidence in pregnant women, said lead researcher Julia Wu, ScD, an epidemiologist at the Harvard School of Public Health’s Human Immunomics Initiative in Boston.

The information vacuum also increases the chances that “people will fall victim to misinformation campaigns like the one on social media that claims that the COVID-19 vaccine causes infertility,” Dr. Wu said. This unfounded claim has deterred some women of childbearing age from getting the vaccine.
 

Deciding to get vaccinated

Frontline health care professionals were in the first group eligible to receive the vaccine in December 2020. “All of us who were pregnant ... had to decide whether to wait for the data, because we don’t know what the risks are, or go ahead and get it [the vaccine]. We had been dealing with the pandemic for months and were afraid of being exposed to the virus and infecting family members,” said Jacqueline Parchem, MD, a maternal-fetal medicine specialist at the University of Texas Health Science Center, Houston.

Given the lack of safety data, the CDC guidance to pregnant women has been to consult with their doctors and that it’s a personal choice. The Center for Disease Control and Prevention’s latest vaccine guidance said that “there is no evidence that antibodies formed from COVID-19 vaccination cause any problem with pregnancy, including the development of the placenta.”

The CDC is monitoring vaccinated people through its v-safe program and reported on April 12 that more than 86,000 v-safe participants said they were pregnant when they were vaccinated.

Health care workers who were nursing their infants when they were eligible for the vaccine faced a similar dilemma as pregnant women – they lacked the data on them to make a truly informed decision.

“I was nervous about the vaccine side effects for myself and whether my son Bennett, who was about a year old, would experience any of these himself,” said Christa Carrig, a labor and delivery nurse at Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston, who was breastfeeding at the time.

She and Dr. Parchem know that pregnant women with COVID-19 are more likely to have severe illness and complications such as high blood pressure and preterm delivery. “Pregnancy takes a toll on the body. When a woman gets COVID-19 and that insult is added, women who were otherwise young and healthy get much sicker than you would expect,” said Ms. Carrig.

“As a high-risk pregnancy specialist, I know that, with COVID, that babies don’t do well when moms are sick,” said Dr. Parchem.

Pregnant women accounted for more than 84,629 cases of COVID-19 and 95 deaths in the United States between Jan. 22 last year and April 12 this year, according to the CDC COVID data tracker.

Dr. Parchem and Ms. Carrig decided to get vaccinated because of their high risk of exposure to COVID-19 at work. After the second dose, Ms. Carrig reported chills but Bennett had no side effects from breastfeeding. Dr. Parchem, who delivered a healthy baby boy in February, reported no side effects other than a sore arm.

“There’s also a psychological benefit to returning to some sense of normalcy,” said Dr. Parchem. “My mother was finally able to visit us to see the new baby after we were all vaccinated. This was the first visit in more than a year.”
 

 

 

New study results

Ms. Carrig was one of 131 vaccinated hospital workers in the Boston area who took part in the first study to profile the immune response in pregnant and breastfeeding women and compare it with both nonpregnant and pregnant women who had COVID-19.

The study was not designed to evaluate the safety of the vaccines or whether they prevent COVID-19 illness and hospitalizations. That is the role of the large vaccine trials, the authors said.

The participants were aged 18-45 years and received both doses of either Pfizer or Moderna vaccines during one of their trimesters. They provided blood and/or breast milk samples after each vaccine dose, 2-6 weeks after the last dose, and at delivery for the 10 who gave birth during the study.

The vaccines produced a similar strong antibody response among the pregnant/breastfeeding women and nonpregnant women. Their antibody levels were much higher than those found in the pregnant women who had COVID-19, the researchers reported on March 25, 2021, in the American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology.

“This is important because a lot of people tend to think once they’ve had COVID-19, they are protected from the virus. This finding suggests that the vaccines produce a stronger antibody response than the infection itself, and this might be important for long-lasting protection against COVID-19,” said Dr. Parchem.

The study also addressed whether newborns benefit from the antibodies produced by their mothers. “In the 10 women who delivered, we detected antibodies in their umbilical cords and breast milk,” says Andrea Edlow, MD, lead researcher and a maternal-fetal medicine specialist at Massachusetts General Hospital.

Newborns are particularly vulnerable to respiratory infections because they have small airways and their immune systems are underdeveloped. These infections can be lethal early in life.

“The public health strategy is to vaccinate mothers against respiratory viruses, bacteria, and parasites that neonates up to 6 months are exposed to. Influenza and pertussis (whooping cough) are two examples of vaccines that we give mothers that we know transfer [antibodies] across the umbilical cord,” said Dr. Edlow.

But this “passive transfer immunity” is different from active immunity, when the body produces its own antibody immune response, she explains.

A different study, also published in March, confirmed that antibodies were transferred from 27 vaccinated pregnant mothers to their infants when they delivered. A new finding was that the women who were vaccinated with both doses and earlier in their third semester passed on more antibodies than the women who were vaccinated later or with only one dose.


 

Impact of the studies

The Society for Maternal-Fetal Medicine updated its guidance on counseling pregnant and lactating patients about the COVID-19 vaccines to include Dr. Edlow’s study.

“We were struck by how much pregnant and breastfeeding women want to participate in research and to help others in the same situation make decisions. I hope this will be an example to drug companies doing research on new vaccines in the future – that they should not be left behind and can make decisions themselves whether to participate after weighing the risks and benefits,” said Dr. Edlow.

She continues to enroll more vaccinated women in her study in the Boston area, including non–health care workers who have asked to take part.

“It was worth getting vaccinated and participating in the study. I know that I have antibodies and it worked and that I passed them on to Bennett. Also, I know that all the information is available for other women who are questioning whether to get vaccinated or not,” said Ms. Carrig.

Dr. Parchem is also taking part in the CDC’s v-safe pregnancy registry, which is collecting health and safety data on vaccinated pregnant women.

Before she was vaccinated, Dr. Parchem said, “my advice was very measured because we lacked data either saying that it definitely works or showing that it was unsafe. Now that we have this data supporting the benefits, I feel more confident in recommending the vaccines.”

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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As the U.S. races to vaccinate millions of people against the coronavirus, pregnant women face the extra challenge of not knowing whether the vaccines are safe for them or their unborn babies.

None of the recent COVID-19 vaccine trials, including those for Pfizer, Moderna, and Johnson & Johnson, enrolled pregnant or breastfeeding women because they consider them a high-risk group.

That was despite the Society for Maternal-Fetal Medicine and the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists asking that pregnant and breastfeeding women be included in trials. The Food and Drug Administration even included pregnant women in the COVID-19 vaccine emergency use authorization (EUA) because of their higher risk of having a more severe disease.

Despite that lack of clinical trial data, more and more smaller studies are suggesting that the vaccines are safe for both mother and child.

Pfizer is now studying its two-dose vaccine in 4,000 pregnant and breastfeeding women to see how safe, tolerated, and robust their immune response is. Researchers will also look at how safe the vaccine is for infants and whether mothers pass along antibodies to children. But the preliminary results won’t be available until the end of the year, a Pfizer spokesperson says.

Without that information, pregnant women are less likely to get vaccinated, according to a large international survey. Less than 45% of pregnant women in the United States said they intended to get vaccinated even when they were told the vaccine was safe and 90% effective. That figure rises to 52% of pregnant women in 16 countries, including the United States, compared with 74% of nonpregnant women willing to be vaccinated. The findings were published online March 1, 2021, in the European Journal of Epidemiology.

The vaccine-hesitant pregnant women in the international study were most concerned that the COVID-19 vaccine could harm their developing fetuses, a worry related to the lack of clinical evidence in pregnant women, said lead researcher Julia Wu, ScD, an epidemiologist at the Harvard School of Public Health’s Human Immunomics Initiative in Boston.

The information vacuum also increases the chances that “people will fall victim to misinformation campaigns like the one on social media that claims that the COVID-19 vaccine causes infertility,” Dr. Wu said. This unfounded claim has deterred some women of childbearing age from getting the vaccine.
 

Deciding to get vaccinated

Frontline health care professionals were in the first group eligible to receive the vaccine in December 2020. “All of us who were pregnant ... had to decide whether to wait for the data, because we don’t know what the risks are, or go ahead and get it [the vaccine]. We had been dealing with the pandemic for months and were afraid of being exposed to the virus and infecting family members,” said Jacqueline Parchem, MD, a maternal-fetal medicine specialist at the University of Texas Health Science Center, Houston.

Given the lack of safety data, the CDC guidance to pregnant women has been to consult with their doctors and that it’s a personal choice. The Center for Disease Control and Prevention’s latest vaccine guidance said that “there is no evidence that antibodies formed from COVID-19 vaccination cause any problem with pregnancy, including the development of the placenta.”

The CDC is monitoring vaccinated people through its v-safe program and reported on April 12 that more than 86,000 v-safe participants said they were pregnant when they were vaccinated.

Health care workers who were nursing their infants when they were eligible for the vaccine faced a similar dilemma as pregnant women – they lacked the data on them to make a truly informed decision.

“I was nervous about the vaccine side effects for myself and whether my son Bennett, who was about a year old, would experience any of these himself,” said Christa Carrig, a labor and delivery nurse at Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston, who was breastfeeding at the time.

She and Dr. Parchem know that pregnant women with COVID-19 are more likely to have severe illness and complications such as high blood pressure and preterm delivery. “Pregnancy takes a toll on the body. When a woman gets COVID-19 and that insult is added, women who were otherwise young and healthy get much sicker than you would expect,” said Ms. Carrig.

“As a high-risk pregnancy specialist, I know that, with COVID, that babies don’t do well when moms are sick,” said Dr. Parchem.

Pregnant women accounted for more than 84,629 cases of COVID-19 and 95 deaths in the United States between Jan. 22 last year and April 12 this year, according to the CDC COVID data tracker.

Dr. Parchem and Ms. Carrig decided to get vaccinated because of their high risk of exposure to COVID-19 at work. After the second dose, Ms. Carrig reported chills but Bennett had no side effects from breastfeeding. Dr. Parchem, who delivered a healthy baby boy in February, reported no side effects other than a sore arm.

“There’s also a psychological benefit to returning to some sense of normalcy,” said Dr. Parchem. “My mother was finally able to visit us to see the new baby after we were all vaccinated. This was the first visit in more than a year.”
 

 

 

New study results

Ms. Carrig was one of 131 vaccinated hospital workers in the Boston area who took part in the first study to profile the immune response in pregnant and breastfeeding women and compare it with both nonpregnant and pregnant women who had COVID-19.

The study was not designed to evaluate the safety of the vaccines or whether they prevent COVID-19 illness and hospitalizations. That is the role of the large vaccine trials, the authors said.

The participants were aged 18-45 years and received both doses of either Pfizer or Moderna vaccines during one of their trimesters. They provided blood and/or breast milk samples after each vaccine dose, 2-6 weeks after the last dose, and at delivery for the 10 who gave birth during the study.

The vaccines produced a similar strong antibody response among the pregnant/breastfeeding women and nonpregnant women. Their antibody levels were much higher than those found in the pregnant women who had COVID-19, the researchers reported on March 25, 2021, in the American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology.

“This is important because a lot of people tend to think once they’ve had COVID-19, they are protected from the virus. This finding suggests that the vaccines produce a stronger antibody response than the infection itself, and this might be important for long-lasting protection against COVID-19,” said Dr. Parchem.

The study also addressed whether newborns benefit from the antibodies produced by their mothers. “In the 10 women who delivered, we detected antibodies in their umbilical cords and breast milk,” says Andrea Edlow, MD, lead researcher and a maternal-fetal medicine specialist at Massachusetts General Hospital.

Newborns are particularly vulnerable to respiratory infections because they have small airways and their immune systems are underdeveloped. These infections can be lethal early in life.

“The public health strategy is to vaccinate mothers against respiratory viruses, bacteria, and parasites that neonates up to 6 months are exposed to. Influenza and pertussis (whooping cough) are two examples of vaccines that we give mothers that we know transfer [antibodies] across the umbilical cord,” said Dr. Edlow.

But this “passive transfer immunity” is different from active immunity, when the body produces its own antibody immune response, she explains.

A different study, also published in March, confirmed that antibodies were transferred from 27 vaccinated pregnant mothers to their infants when they delivered. A new finding was that the women who were vaccinated with both doses and earlier in their third semester passed on more antibodies than the women who were vaccinated later or with only one dose.


 

Impact of the studies

The Society for Maternal-Fetal Medicine updated its guidance on counseling pregnant and lactating patients about the COVID-19 vaccines to include Dr. Edlow’s study.

“We were struck by how much pregnant and breastfeeding women want to participate in research and to help others in the same situation make decisions. I hope this will be an example to drug companies doing research on new vaccines in the future – that they should not be left behind and can make decisions themselves whether to participate after weighing the risks and benefits,” said Dr. Edlow.

She continues to enroll more vaccinated women in her study in the Boston area, including non–health care workers who have asked to take part.

“It was worth getting vaccinated and participating in the study. I know that I have antibodies and it worked and that I passed them on to Bennett. Also, I know that all the information is available for other women who are questioning whether to get vaccinated or not,” said Ms. Carrig.

Dr. Parchem is also taking part in the CDC’s v-safe pregnancy registry, which is collecting health and safety data on vaccinated pregnant women.

Before she was vaccinated, Dr. Parchem said, “my advice was very measured because we lacked data either saying that it definitely works or showing that it was unsafe. Now that we have this data supporting the benefits, I feel more confident in recommending the vaccines.”

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

As the U.S. races to vaccinate millions of people against the coronavirus, pregnant women face the extra challenge of not knowing whether the vaccines are safe for them or their unborn babies.

None of the recent COVID-19 vaccine trials, including those for Pfizer, Moderna, and Johnson & Johnson, enrolled pregnant or breastfeeding women because they consider them a high-risk group.

That was despite the Society for Maternal-Fetal Medicine and the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists asking that pregnant and breastfeeding women be included in trials. The Food and Drug Administration even included pregnant women in the COVID-19 vaccine emergency use authorization (EUA) because of their higher risk of having a more severe disease.

Despite that lack of clinical trial data, more and more smaller studies are suggesting that the vaccines are safe for both mother and child.

Pfizer is now studying its two-dose vaccine in 4,000 pregnant and breastfeeding women to see how safe, tolerated, and robust their immune response is. Researchers will also look at how safe the vaccine is for infants and whether mothers pass along antibodies to children. But the preliminary results won’t be available until the end of the year, a Pfizer spokesperson says.

Without that information, pregnant women are less likely to get vaccinated, according to a large international survey. Less than 45% of pregnant women in the United States said they intended to get vaccinated even when they were told the vaccine was safe and 90% effective. That figure rises to 52% of pregnant women in 16 countries, including the United States, compared with 74% of nonpregnant women willing to be vaccinated. The findings were published online March 1, 2021, in the European Journal of Epidemiology.

The vaccine-hesitant pregnant women in the international study were most concerned that the COVID-19 vaccine could harm their developing fetuses, a worry related to the lack of clinical evidence in pregnant women, said lead researcher Julia Wu, ScD, an epidemiologist at the Harvard School of Public Health’s Human Immunomics Initiative in Boston.

The information vacuum also increases the chances that “people will fall victim to misinformation campaigns like the one on social media that claims that the COVID-19 vaccine causes infertility,” Dr. Wu said. This unfounded claim has deterred some women of childbearing age from getting the vaccine.
 

Deciding to get vaccinated

Frontline health care professionals were in the first group eligible to receive the vaccine in December 2020. “All of us who were pregnant ... had to decide whether to wait for the data, because we don’t know what the risks are, or go ahead and get it [the vaccine]. We had been dealing with the pandemic for months and were afraid of being exposed to the virus and infecting family members,” said Jacqueline Parchem, MD, a maternal-fetal medicine specialist at the University of Texas Health Science Center, Houston.

Given the lack of safety data, the CDC guidance to pregnant women has been to consult with their doctors and that it’s a personal choice. The Center for Disease Control and Prevention’s latest vaccine guidance said that “there is no evidence that antibodies formed from COVID-19 vaccination cause any problem with pregnancy, including the development of the placenta.”

The CDC is monitoring vaccinated people through its v-safe program and reported on April 12 that more than 86,000 v-safe participants said they were pregnant when they were vaccinated.

Health care workers who were nursing their infants when they were eligible for the vaccine faced a similar dilemma as pregnant women – they lacked the data on them to make a truly informed decision.

“I was nervous about the vaccine side effects for myself and whether my son Bennett, who was about a year old, would experience any of these himself,” said Christa Carrig, a labor and delivery nurse at Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston, who was breastfeeding at the time.

She and Dr. Parchem know that pregnant women with COVID-19 are more likely to have severe illness and complications such as high blood pressure and preterm delivery. “Pregnancy takes a toll on the body. When a woman gets COVID-19 and that insult is added, women who were otherwise young and healthy get much sicker than you would expect,” said Ms. Carrig.

“As a high-risk pregnancy specialist, I know that, with COVID, that babies don’t do well when moms are sick,” said Dr. Parchem.

Pregnant women accounted for more than 84,629 cases of COVID-19 and 95 deaths in the United States between Jan. 22 last year and April 12 this year, according to the CDC COVID data tracker.

Dr. Parchem and Ms. Carrig decided to get vaccinated because of their high risk of exposure to COVID-19 at work. After the second dose, Ms. Carrig reported chills but Bennett had no side effects from breastfeeding. Dr. Parchem, who delivered a healthy baby boy in February, reported no side effects other than a sore arm.

“There’s also a psychological benefit to returning to some sense of normalcy,” said Dr. Parchem. “My mother was finally able to visit us to see the new baby after we were all vaccinated. This was the first visit in more than a year.”
 

 

 

New study results

Ms. Carrig was one of 131 vaccinated hospital workers in the Boston area who took part in the first study to profile the immune response in pregnant and breastfeeding women and compare it with both nonpregnant and pregnant women who had COVID-19.

The study was not designed to evaluate the safety of the vaccines or whether they prevent COVID-19 illness and hospitalizations. That is the role of the large vaccine trials, the authors said.

The participants were aged 18-45 years and received both doses of either Pfizer or Moderna vaccines during one of their trimesters. They provided blood and/or breast milk samples after each vaccine dose, 2-6 weeks after the last dose, and at delivery for the 10 who gave birth during the study.

The vaccines produced a similar strong antibody response among the pregnant/breastfeeding women and nonpregnant women. Their antibody levels were much higher than those found in the pregnant women who had COVID-19, the researchers reported on March 25, 2021, in the American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology.

“This is important because a lot of people tend to think once they’ve had COVID-19, they are protected from the virus. This finding suggests that the vaccines produce a stronger antibody response than the infection itself, and this might be important for long-lasting protection against COVID-19,” said Dr. Parchem.

The study also addressed whether newborns benefit from the antibodies produced by their mothers. “In the 10 women who delivered, we detected antibodies in their umbilical cords and breast milk,” says Andrea Edlow, MD, lead researcher and a maternal-fetal medicine specialist at Massachusetts General Hospital.

Newborns are particularly vulnerable to respiratory infections because they have small airways and their immune systems are underdeveloped. These infections can be lethal early in life.

“The public health strategy is to vaccinate mothers against respiratory viruses, bacteria, and parasites that neonates up to 6 months are exposed to. Influenza and pertussis (whooping cough) are two examples of vaccines that we give mothers that we know transfer [antibodies] across the umbilical cord,” said Dr. Edlow.

But this “passive transfer immunity” is different from active immunity, when the body produces its own antibody immune response, she explains.

A different study, also published in March, confirmed that antibodies were transferred from 27 vaccinated pregnant mothers to their infants when they delivered. A new finding was that the women who were vaccinated with both doses and earlier in their third semester passed on more antibodies than the women who were vaccinated later or with only one dose.


 

Impact of the studies

The Society for Maternal-Fetal Medicine updated its guidance on counseling pregnant and lactating patients about the COVID-19 vaccines to include Dr. Edlow’s study.

“We were struck by how much pregnant and breastfeeding women want to participate in research and to help others in the same situation make decisions. I hope this will be an example to drug companies doing research on new vaccines in the future – that they should not be left behind and can make decisions themselves whether to participate after weighing the risks and benefits,” said Dr. Edlow.

She continues to enroll more vaccinated women in her study in the Boston area, including non–health care workers who have asked to take part.

“It was worth getting vaccinated and participating in the study. I know that I have antibodies and it worked and that I passed them on to Bennett. Also, I know that all the information is available for other women who are questioning whether to get vaccinated or not,” said Ms. Carrig.

Dr. Parchem is also taking part in the CDC’s v-safe pregnancy registry, which is collecting health and safety data on vaccinated pregnant women.

Before she was vaccinated, Dr. Parchem said, “my advice was very measured because we lacked data either saying that it definitely works or showing that it was unsafe. Now that we have this data supporting the benefits, I feel more confident in recommending the vaccines.”

A version of this article first appeared on Medscape.com.

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