
Lindsey TannerThe Associated PressPregnant women with COVID-19 face increased chances for stillbirths compared with uninfected women, and that risk spiked to four times higher after the delta variant emerged, new government data show.The federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention released a report Friday, Nov. 19, that examined 1.2 million deliveries in 736 hospitals nationwide from March 2020 through September 2021.Stillbirths were rare overall, totaling 8,154 among all deliveries. But the researchers found that for women with COVID-19, about 1 in 80 deliveries resulted in stillbirth. Among the uninfected, it was 1 in 155.Among those with COVID-19, stillbirths were more common in people with chronic high blood pressure and other complications, including those i